Abstract

Cysteine is an essential requirement in living organisms. However, due to its reactive thiol side chain, elevated levels of intracellular cysteine can be toxic and therefore need to be rapidly eliminated from the cellular milieu. In mammals and many other organisms, excess cysteine is believed to be primarily eliminated by the cysteine dioxygenase dependent oxidative degradation of cysteine, followed by the removal of the oxidative products. However, other mechanisms of tackling excess cysteine are also likely to exist, but have not thus far been explored. In this study, we use Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which naturally lacks a cysteine dioxygenase, to investigate mechanisms for tackling cysteine overload. Overexpressing the high affinity cysteine transporter, YCT1, enabled yeast cells to rapidly accumulate high levels of intracellular cysteine. Using targeted metabolite analysis, we observe that cysteine is initially rapidly interconverted to non-reactive cystine in vivo. A time course revealed that cells systematically convert excess cysteine to inert thiol forms; initially to cystine, and subsequently to cystathionine, S-Adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH) and S-Adenosyl L-methionine (SAM), in addition to eventually accumulating glutathione (GSH) and polyamines. Microarray based gene expression studies revealed the upregulation of arginine/ornithine biosynthesis a few hours after the cysteine overload, and suggest that the non-toxic, non-reactive thiol based metabolic products are eventually utilized for amino acid and polyamine biogenesis, thereby enabling cell growth. Thus, cells can handle potentially toxic amounts of cysteine by a combination of thiol trapping, metabolic redistribution to non-reactive thiols and subsequent consumption for anabolism.

Highlights

  • Cysteine is essential for the survival of all cells, and is obtained either through de novo biosynthesis, or is transported into cells from the extracellular medium by amino acid transporters

  • Microarray based gene expression studies revealed the upregulation of arginine/ornithine biosynthesis a few hours after the cysteine overload, and suggest that the nontoxic, non-reactive thiol based metabolic products are eventually utilized for amino acid and polyamine biogenesis, thereby enabling cell growth

  • Our results show that cysteine and cystine can rapidly interconvert in vivo, and that a principal mechanism of removal of excess cysteine is through its conversion into more inert forms of thiols, effectively a form of ‘thiol trapping’

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Summary

Introduction

Cysteine is essential for the survival of all cells, and is obtained either through de novo biosynthesis, or is transported into cells from the extracellular medium by amino acid transporters. In organisms such as bacteria, archaea, fungi and plants, cysteine biosynthesis occurs de novo from inorganic sulfate [1,2,3,4]. High cysteine levels are extremely toxic especially in neuronal cells [19, 20]. Compared to other amino acids, the intracellular cysteine concentrations in the cell appear to be maintained at much lower levels at steady state [21], and may be a limiting amino acid for many processes

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