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A redox cycle with complex II prioritizes sulfide quinone oxidoreductase-dependent H2S oxidation

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101435Get rights and content
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The dual roles of H2S as an endogenously synthesized respiratory substrate and as a toxin raise questions as to how it is cleared when the electron transport chain is inhibited. Sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR) catalyzes the first step in the mitochondrial H2S oxidation pathway, using CoQ as an electron acceptor, and connects to the electron transport chain at the level of complex III. We have discovered that at high H2S concentrations, which are known to inhibit complex IV, a new redox cycle is established between SQOR and complex II, operating in reverse. Under these conditions, the purine nucleotide cycle and the malate aspartate shuttle furnish fumarate, which supports complex II reversal and leads to succinate accumulation. Complex II knockdown in colonocytes decreases the efficiency of H2S clearance while targeted knockout of complex II in intestinal epithelial cells significantly decreases the levels of thiosulfate, a biomarker of H2S oxidation, to approximately one-third of the values seen in serum and urine samples from control mice. These data establish the physiological relevance of this newly discovered redox circuitry between SQOR and complex II for prioritizing H2S oxidation and reveal the quantitatively significant contribution of intestinal epithelial cells to systemic H2S metabolism.

Keywords

hydrogen sulfide
complex II
electron transport chain
coenzyme Q
fumarate
SDHA

Abbreviations

CoQ
coenzyme Q
DES
diethyl succinate
DMF
dimethyl fumarate
DMI
dimethyl itaconate
DMM
dimethyl malonate
ETC
electron transport chain
ndSQOR
nanodisc-embedded SQOR
NNT
nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase
OCR
oxygen consumption rate
PNC
purine nucleotide cycle
ROS
reactive oxygen species
SQOR
sulfide quinone oxidoreductase

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