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TRP14 is the rate-limiting enzyme for intracellular cystine reduction and regulates proteome cysteinylation.

Pablo Martí-AndrésIsabela FinamorIsabel Torres-CuevasSalvador PérezSergio Rius-PérezHildegard Colino-LageDavid Guerrero-GómezEsperanza MoratoAnabel MarinaPatrycja MichalskaRafael LeónQing ChengEszter Petra JurányiKlaudia Borbényi-GalambosIván MillánPéter NagyAntonio Miranda-VizueteEdward E SchmidtAntonio Martínez-RuizElias S J ArnérJuan Sastre
Published in: The EMBO journal (2024)
It has remained unknown how cells reduce cystine taken up from the extracellular space, which is a required step for further utilization of cysteine in key processes such as protein or glutathione synthesis. Here, we show that the thioredoxin-related protein of 14 kDa (TRP14, encoded by TXNDC17) is the rate-limiting enzyme for intracellular cystine reduction. When TRP14 is genetically knocked out, cysteine synthesis through the transsulfuration pathway becomes the major source of cysteine in human cells, and knockout of both pathways becomes lethal in C. elegans subjected to proteotoxic stress. TRP14 can also reduce cysteinyl moieties on proteins, rescuing their activities as here shown with cysteinylated peroxiredoxin 2. Txndc17 knockout mice were, surprisingly, protected in an acute pancreatitis model, concomitant with activation of Nrf2-driven antioxidant pathways and upregulation of transsulfuration. We conclude that TRP14 is the evolutionarily conserved enzyme principally responsible for intracellular cystine reduction in C. elegans, mice, and humans.
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