Login / Signup

Cysteine Trisulfide Protects E. coli from Electrophile-Induced Death through the Generation of Cysteine Hydropersulfide.

Catherine F HendersonIris BicaFaith T LongDrew D IrwinChristine H StullBlaine W BakerValeria Suarez VegaZachary M TaugherEliza D FletesJuliet M BartlesonMegan L HumphreyLucía ÁlvarezMasahiro AkiyamaYoshito KumagaiJon M FukutoJoseph Lin
Published in: Chemical research in toxicology (2020)
Hydropersulfide and polysulfide species have recently been shown to elicit a wide variety of biological and physiological responses. In this study, we examine the effects of cysteine trisulfide (Cys-SSS-Cys; also known as thiocystine) treatment on E. coli. Previous studies in mammalian cells have shown that Cys-SSS-Cys treatment results in protection from the electrophiles. Here, we show that the protective effect of Cys-SSS-Cys treatment against electrophile-induced cell death is conserved in E. coli. This protection correlates with the rapid generation of cysteine hydropersulfide (Cys-SSH) in the culture media. We go on to demonstrate that an exogenous phosphatase expressed in E. coli, containing only a single catalytic cysteine, is protected from electrophile-induced inactivation in the presence of hydropersulfides. These data together demonstrate that E. coli can utilize Cys-SSS-Cys to generate Cys-SSH and that the Cys-SSH can protect cellular thiols from reactivity with the electrophiles.
Keyphrases