bims-celmim Biomed News
on Cellular and mitochondrial metabolism
Issue of 2025–12–07
29 papers selected by
Marc Segarra Mondejar, AINA



  1. Cell Death Dis. 2025 Dec 01. 16(1): 879
      Ovarian clear cell carcinoma is characterized by HNF-1ß overexpression and is known to be resistant to chemotherapy. An inhibitor screening that specifically targets HNF-1ß led us to identify Actinonin as a candidate for cancer treatment. Actinonin, which is known to inhibit aminopeptidase M, has also been recognized for its antibacterial properties. We confirmed that GSK-3ß interference/inhibition, as a component of the HNF-1ß pathway, combined with Actinonin, has a highly potent antitumor effect compared to monotherapy. The same effect was observed in renal clear cell carcinoma lines expressing HNF-1ß. Actinonin promoted mitochondrial production by suppressing aerobic respiration, which decreased AMPK levels and increased ROS production. However, it also elevated GADD45α expression and induced mitophagy. GSK-3ß inhibition suppressed glycolysis and shifted energy production to OXPHOS, leading to increased ROS production. Furthermore, this combination produced excess ROS beyond metabolic capacity, which accumulated in lipid bilayers, leading to a further increase in CHOP gene expression and suppression of mitochondrial turnover. The GSK-3ß inhibitor and Actinonin combination demonstrated a powerful tumor-suppressive effect in vivo without severe side effects. Combining GSK-3ß inhibition with Actinonin can effectively eliminate cancer cells with HNF-1ß overexpression by inhibiting glycolysis and promoting mitochondrial turnover, highlighting new options for cancer therapy.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-025-08243-2
  2. Cell Metab. 2025 Dec 02. pii: S1550-4131(25)00489-9. [Epub ahead of print]37(12): 2298-2300
      Cancer cells experience multiple stresses within tumors, stemming from elevated metabolic activity, including nutrient shortage, waste buildup, hypoxia, and acidosis. According to Groessl et al.,1 acidosis is the dominant environmental factor offering metabolic flexibility to support tumor fitness and resilience to the other stresses by promoting mitochondria fusion and enhancing respiration capacity.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2025.11.005
  3. bioRxiv. 2025 Nov 17. pii: 2025.11.17.688927. [Epub ahead of print]
      Breast cancer recurrence remains a major clinical challenge, often associated with therapy resistance and altered metabolic states. To define metabolic vulnerabilities of recurrent disease, we performed a CRISPR knockout screen targeting 421 metabolic genes in paired primary and recurrent HER2-driven breast cancer cell lines. While both primary and recurrent tumors shared dependencies on core metabolic pathways, recurrent tumors exhibited selective essentiality for the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway, including Cad , Dhodh , and Ctps . Pharmacologic inhibition of the rate-limiting enzyme DHODH with BAY-2402234 selectively impaired the growth of recurrent tumor cells, while primary tumor cells were relatively resistant. BAY treatment robustly inhibited pyrimidine synthesis in all lines, but only recurrent cells underwent iron-dependent lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic cell death. Lipidomic profiling revealed enrichment of polyunsaturated ether phospholipids in recurrent cells, which may predispose them to ferroptosis. A sensitizer CRISPR screen in primary cells further identified nucleotide salvage and lipid metabolic pathways as modifiers of DHODH inhibitor sensitivity. Stable isotope tracing and nutrient depletion experiments showed that primary cells can compensate for DHODH inhibition through nucleotide salvage, whereas recurrent cells exhibit impaired salvage capacity, likely due to reduced expression of Slc28 / Slc29 nucleoside transporters. Together, these findings reveal that breast cancer recurrence is associated with increased dependence on de novo pyrimidine synthesis to suppress ferroptosis, highlighting a therapeutically actionable metabolic vulnerability in recurrent disease.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.11.17.688927
  4. J Vis Exp. 2025 Nov 14.
      Mitochondria are best recognized for their role in ATP synthesis and serve as key regulators of cellular metabolism. Mitochondrial dynamics comprehend the intracellular and intercellular movement of mitochondria, as well as the processes of fission/fusion. These events are fundamental to maintaining mitochondrial function by maintaining cellular homeostasis, morphology, bioenergetics, quality control, and stress responses. On the other hand, dysregulation of mitochondrial dynamics impacts cellular morphology and function. Precise measurement of mitochondria fission/fusion events can be indicative of cellular health. Current methodologies to measure mitochondria dynamics employ advanced imaging like super-resolution microscopy, fluorescence techniques (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP)) for connectivity, and optogenetic tools for spatiotemporal control. Quantitative analysis utilizes computational tools to measure parameters like length, number, and branching, which indicate fission/fusion balance. However, these methods require skills and sophisticated instruments. In this article, we describe the use of confocal microscopy combined with free-to-use tools in ImageJ (Fiji) to study fission/fusion events using the photo-switching property of the dendra2 protein, tagged to mitochondrial cytochrome c.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.3791/69268
  5. bioRxiv. 2025 Nov 17. pii: 2025.04.14.648769. [Epub ahead of print]
      Aging results from the gradual accumulation of molecular damage as a result of cellular processes and is characterized by impaired functions, most notably an age-related decline in ATP production. However, the causal relationship between cellular ATP homeostasis and aging has not been established. In this study, we used a novel approach by harnessing a nucleotide transporter from a eukaryotic intracellular parasite to facilitate the direct import of extracellular ATP into budding yeast cells, enabling us to effectively manipulate their intracellular ATP levels. We found that depletion of ATP significantly reduces lifespan, while the supplementation of ATP in the growth medium fully restores it thereby extending lifespan. Moreover, gene expression analysis revealed that elevated ATP levels inhibit catabolic processes, indicating a suppression of glucose metabolism. Overall, our study revealed the direct impact of cellular ATP homeostasis on lifespan regulation that has never been directly tested before. This work offers new insights into the bioenergetic control of aging and positions energy metabolism as a promising target for longevity interventions.
    Significance: Cellular energy homeostasis is a crucial factor in determining the health and longevity of organisms. While intracellular ATP levels are tightly regulated, the idea that cells can directly take in extracellular ATP to influence metabolism has not been thoroughly explored. In this study, we engineered yeast cells to import external ATP and demonstrated that this approach significantly alters mitochondrial function, metabolic flow, and aging processes. Our findings show that ATP uptake inhibits catabolic pathways and enhances mitochondrial maintenance, thereby extending cellular lifespan through a novel and non-traditional mechanism. This research reveals an unexpected degree of metabolic flexibility and introduces a synthetic biology-based method to reprogram energy metabolism and longevity. The principles established in this study provide a new framework for understanding the role of cellular bioenergetics in aging, highlighting how the modulation of ATP availability can impact metabolic states and lifespan regulation.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.04.14.648769
  6. Trends Cancer. 2025 Nov 28. pii: S2405-8033(25)00280-8. [Epub ahead of print]
      Tumors dynamically interact with the central and peripheral nervous systems, hijacking neural plasticity and reprogramming metabolism in a bidirectional manner to drive cancer progression. Neural inputs reshape the metabolism of cancer cells and their microenvironment - glycolysis, oxidative phosphorylation, and lipid metabolism - while tumors exploit neuronal nutrients and mitochondria to thrive under metabolic stress. This review explores neurocancer metabolic crosstalk through multiple mechanisms by three principal modes of interaction, highlighting how targeting these metabolic interdependencies could disrupt tumor progression. By integrating cancer metabolism and neuroscience, it offers a conceptual framework for understanding neural-tumor metabolic circuits in malignancy and identifies potential therapeutic vulnerabilities.
    Keywords:  cancer; crosstalk; metabolism; neuron; therapy
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trecan.2025.11.006
  7. PLoS Biol. 2025 Dec 04. 23(12): e3003523
      Mitochondrial function and dynamics are essential for maintaining cellular homeostasis and overall health. Disruptions in these processes can contribute to various diseases, including cancer. The Hippo signaling pathway, a key regulator of tissue growth, plays a central role in cancer through its main effector, the Yes-associated protein (YAP), known as Yorkie (Yki) in Drosophila. In this model organism, Yki upregulation drives benign tissue overgrowth in imaginal discs. Our research demonstrates that the conserved metabolic regulator dPGC1 restricts Yki-driven tissue hyperplasia and helps maintain epithelial integrity in vivo. Combined Yki upregulation and dPGC1 depletion results in tumors characterized by enlarged mitochondria and the upregulation of genes promoting mitochondrial fusion, a condition that is both necessary and sufficient for Yki-driven oncogenic growth. We further demonstrate that mitochondrial enlargement is associated with increased levels of the cell cycle regulator Cyclin E, which plays a critical role in tumor development. These findings identify dPGC1 as a context-dependent tumor suppressor that coordinates mitochondrial dynamics and cell cycle regulation in response to oncogene activation, with implications for understanding cancer development in humans.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003523
  8. Nat Commun. 2025 Dec 04. 16(1): 10898
      T cell activation requires extensive metabolic reprogramming, but the specific requirement for mitochondrial respiration (MR) remains unresolved. While most studies have focused on aerobic glycolysis as the primary driver of proliferation and effector function, the role of MR has not been completely defined. To isolate MR from proton pumping by cytochrome c oxidase (COX), we expressed the non-proton-pumping alternative oxidase (AOX) in activated COX-deficient T cells. AOX restored electron flow, membrane potential, and mitochondrial ATP production, ultimately rescuing proliferation, effector and memory differentiation, and antiviral immunity. These improvements required upstream electron input, particularly from Complex I, with Complex II and DHODH contributing more modestly. Despite restored MR, glycolysis remained elevated, likely due to altered redox signaling. These findings demonstrate that MR, normally mediated by COX, is necessary and can be sufficient to support T cell activation and function, independent of proton translocation, provided upstream electron input is maintained.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65910-w
  9. Nat Commun. 2025 Dec 03. 16(1): 10858
      Autophagy-based targeted degradation offers a powerful complement to proteasomal degradation leveraging the capacity and versatility of lysosomes to degrade complex cargo. However, it remains unclear which components of the autophagy-lysosomal pathway are most effective for targeted degradation. Here, we describe two orthogonal induced-proximity strategies to identify autophagy effectors capable of degrading organelles and soluble targets. Recruitment of autophagy cargo receptors, ATG8-like proteins, or the kinases ULK1 and TBK1 is sufficient to trigger mitophagy, while only autophagy cargo receptors capable of self-oligomerization degrade soluble cytosolic proteins. We further report a single-domain antibody against p62 and its use as a heterobifunctional degrader to clear mitochondria. Fusing the p62 single-domain antibody to PINK1 enables selective targeting of damaged mitochondria. Our study highlights the importance of avidity for targeted autophagy and suggests that autophagy cargo receptors are attractive entry points for the development of heterobifunctional degraders for organelles or protein aggregates.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65868-9
  10. Cell Metab. 2025 Dec 01. pii: S1550-4131(25)00482-6. [Epub ahead of print]
      Recent advancements in metabolic flux estimations in vivo are limited to preclinical models, primarily due to challenges in tissue sampling, tumor microenvironment (TME) heterogeneity, and non-steady-state conditions. To address these limitations and enable flux estimation in human patients, we developed two machine learning-based frameworks. First, the digital twin framework (DTF) integrates first-principles stoichiometric and isotopic simulations with convolutional neural networks to estimate fluxes in patient bulk samples. Second, the single-cell metabolic flux analysis (13C-scMFA) framework combines patient single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data with 13C-isotope tracing, allowing single-cell-level flux quantification. These studies allow quantification of metabolic activity in neoplastic glioma cells, revealing frequently elevated purine synthesis and serine uptake, compared with non-malignant cells. Our models also identify metabolic heterogeneity among patients and mice with brain cancer, in turn predicting treatment responses to metabolic inhibitors. Our frameworks advance in vivo metabolic flux analysis, may lead to novel metabolic therapies, and identify biomarkers for metabolism-directed therapies in patients.
    Keywords:  (13)C-single-cell metabolic flux analysis; cancer metabolism; glioblastoma; in vivo isotope tracing; in vivo metabolism; machine learning; purine metabolism; scRNA-seq; serine metabolism; tumor microenvironment
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2025.10.022
  11. Nat Commun. 2025 Dec 02. 16(1): 10842
      Sophisticated techniques are available for systematic studies of yeast cell biology. However, it remains challenging to investigate protein subcellular localization changes on a proteome-wide scale. Here, we apply Dynamic Organellar Mapping by label-free mass spectrometry to detect localization changes of native, untagged proteins during endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. We find that hundreds of proteins shift between cellular compartments. For example, we show that numerous secretory pathway proteins accumulate in the ER, thus defining the extent and selectivity of ER retention of misfolded proteins. Furthermore, we identify candidate cargo proteins of the ER reflux pathway, determine constituents of reticulon clusters that segregate from the remainder of the ER and provide evidence for altered nuclear pore complex composition and nuclear import. These findings uncover protein relocalization as a major aspect of cellular reorganization during ER stress and establish Dynamic Organellar Maps as a powerful discovery tool in yeast.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-66946-8
  12. Nat Aging. 2025 Dec 03.
      One of the most abundant cellular components of the normal adjacent tissue surrounding colorectal cancer is colonic epithelial cells (CECs); however, little is known about their interactions with tumor cells. Here we found that peritumoral CECs collaborate with cancer cells to orchestrate a pro-carcinogenic niche. In clinical cohort analyses, we show that growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) levels increase in normal adjacent tissue, in particular in CECs, at advanced disease and are inversely correlated with survival. Using mouse models, organoids and in vitro approaches, we link GDF15 upregulation to senescence in peritumoral CECs and identify a CEC-derived GDF15-driven metabolic feedback loop fueling tumor survival. We show that GDF15 secretion upregulates the glycolytic enzyme ENO1 in cancer cells, which triggers extracellular lactate release and subsequent lactylation of H4K8 in CECs, augmenting GDF15 transcription. Our findings establish a mode of intercellular crosstalk mediating collaboration between colorectal cancer cells and peritumoral CECs, providing a potential avenue for targeted intervention in colorectal cancer.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-025-01023-9
  13. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Dec 09. 122(49): e2508707122
      Higher exercise capacity and regular exercise training improve cancer prognosis at all stages of disease. However, the metabolic adaptations to aerobic exercise training that mediate tumor-host interactions are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that voluntary wheel running slows tumor growth and repartitions glucose uptake and oxidation to skeletal and cardiac muscle and away from breast and melanoma tumors in mice. Further, prehabilitation induces repartitioning of glucose metabolism in obese mice: Uptake and oxidation of glucose are enhanced in skeletal and cardiac muscle, and reduced in tumors. These increases in muscle glucose metabolism and reductions in tumor glucose metabolism, correlated with slower tumor progression. Using [U-13C6] glucose infusion, we show that exercise increases the fractional contribution of glucose to oxidative metabolism in muscle while reducing it in tumors, suggesting that aerobic exercise shifts systemic glucose metabolism away from the tumor microenvironment and toward metabolically active tissues. Transcriptional analysis revealed downregulation of mTOR signaling in tumors from exercised mice. Collectively, our findings suggest that voluntary exercise may suppress tumor progression by enhancing host tissue glucose oxidation and limiting tumor glucose availability, supporting a model in which exercise-induced metabolic competition constrains tumor energetics.
    Keywords:  breast cancer; exercise; melanoma; tumor metabolism
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2508707122
  14. PLoS Biol. 2025 Dec 05. 23(12): e3003540
      Lysosomes are critical hubs for both cellular degradation and signal transduction, yet their function declines with age. Aging is also associated with significant changes in lysosomal morphology, but the physiological significance of these alterations remains poorly understood. Here, we find that a subset of aged lysosomes undergo enlargement resulting from lysosomal dysfunction in C. elegans. Importantly, this enlargement is not merely a passive consequence of functional decline but represents an active adaptive response to preserve lysosomal degradation capacity. Blocking lysosomal enlargement exacerbates the impaired degradation of dysfunctional lysosomes. Mechanistically, lysosomal enlargement is a transcriptionally regulated process governed by the longevity transcription factor SKN-1, which responds to lysosomal dysfunction by restricting fission and thereby induces lysosomal enlargement. Furthermore, in long-lived germline-deficient animals, SKN-1 activation induces lysosomal enlargement, thereby promoting lysosomal degradation and contributing to longevity. These findings unveil a morphological adaptation that safeguards lysosomal homeostasis, with potential relevance for lysosomal aging and life span.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003540
  15. Cell Rep Med. 2025 Dec 01. pii: S2666-3791(25)00544-0. [Epub ahead of print] 102471
      Despite the beneficial impact of bariatric surgery on obesity and metabolic disease, continued post-surgical obesity and weight recurrence are common, but may be impacted by diet. While guidelines recommend a post-operative high-protein diet to preserve lean mass, emerging evidence suggests that humans and mice are metabolically healthier on low-protein diets. Here, we assess the effect of varying dietary protein on post-surgical metabolism in a mouse model of sleeve gastrectomy. We find that a low-protein diet optimally drives post-surgical weight loss, boosts energy expenditure, and improves blood glucose regulation, likely, in part, due to the induction of FGF21. Through multi-omics, we identified clusters of differentially expressed genes and metabolites that correlate with these phenotypes and find that diet heavily influences the liver's molecular response to sleeve gastrectomy. These results suggest that current post-surgical high-protein diets may limit the short- and long-term benefits of surgery and warrant human clinical trials.
    Keywords:  FGF21; bariatric surgery; body composition; diet; energy expenditure; glucose metabolism; liver; low-protein diet; multi-omics; sleeve gastrectomy
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xcrm.2025.102471
  16. Nat Commun. 2025 Dec 03.
      Mitochondrial dysfunction underlies a wide range of human diseases, including primary mitochondrial disorders, neurodegeneration, cancer, and ageing. To preserve cellular homeostasis, organisms have evolved adaptive mechanisms that coordinate nuclear and mitochondrial gene expression. Here, we use genome-wide CRISPR knockout screening to identify cell fitness pathways that support survival under impaired mitochondrial protein synthesis. The strongest suppressor of aberrant mitochondrial translation defects - besides a compendium of known mitochondrial translation quality control factors - is the loss of the vacuolar-type H+-ATPase (v-ATPase), a key regulator of intracellular acidification, nutrient sensing, and growth signaling. We show that partial v-ATPase loss reciprocally modulates mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) and cristae structure in both cancer cell lines and mitochondrial disease patient-derived models. Our findings uncover an extra-organellar buffering mechanism whereby partial v-ATPase inhibition mitigates mitochondrial dysfunction by altering pH homeostasis and driving metabolic rewiring as a protective response that promotes cell fitness.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-66656-1
  17. Nat Commun. 2025 Dec 01. 16(1): 10426
      Brown adipocytes facilitate non-shivering thermogenesis, which is critical for maintaining energy balance and heat production in response to environmental stimuli. Here, we delineate the physiological and biochemical role of etoposide-induced 2.4 (Ei24) in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production and thermogenesis in brown adipocytes. We generated Ei24 adipocyte-specific knockout (EiaKO) mice that exhibited brown adipose tissue hypertrophy, lipid accumulation, and various mitochondrial abnormalities. Despite mitochondrial defects, uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) expression and activity remained unchanged. However, those impairments caused lethal hypothermia in mice subjected to cold challenge, underscoring the key role of Ei24 in mitochondrial functions. Mechanistically, Ei24 deficiency disrupted cristae structure, dissipated mitochondrial membrane potential, and reduced matrix pH, leading to severe ATP depletion. We further identify the C-terminal region of Ei24 as essential for supporting ATP synthase function. Those bioenergetic defects not only destabilized the mitochondrial environment necessary for efficient UCP1-mediated thermogenesis, but also impaired ATP-dependent futile cycles such as SERCA-mediated calcium cycling and creatine substrate cycling. Together, our findings indicate that Ei24 functions as a thermogenic regulator that ensures mitochondrial ATP synthesis and structural integrity, enabling both coupled and uncoupled respiration in brown adipose tissue.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-66460-x
  18. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Dec 09. 122(49): e2513595122
      Endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) is a quality control process which removes misfolded proteins from the ER. The central component of the most conserved ERAD system is an integral membrane ubiquitin ligase called Hrd1. The Hrd1 ligase functions within a complex to mediate the recognition and ubiquitination of both soluble, lumenal substrates and integral membrane substrates, all of which are ultimately targeted for degradation by the cytosolic proteasome. Here, we used deep mutational scanning to identify Hrd1 residues exclusively involved in the degradation of integral membrane substrates. We report single residue Hrd1 variants that are broadly deficient in the degradation of all integral membrane substrates tested. Using in vivo assays to characterize Hrd1 variant deficiency, we explain how integral membrane substrates compete with other complex components to control Hrd1 function. This work reveals competition for the retrotranslocon cavity between both lumenal and membrane substrate degradation paths and highlights Hrd1 complex assembly as the primary determinant for tuning ERAD function.
    Keywords:  ERAD; deep mutational scanning; endoplasmic reticulum–associated degradation; protein degradation; ubiquitin proteasome system
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2513595122
  19. bioRxiv. 2025 Nov 18. pii: 2025.11.18.689025. [Epub ahead of print]
      Mitochondrial dysfunction and defective mitophagy are defining features of numerous neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders, yet existing tools provide limited ability to quantify mitophagy dynamics in real time within living, post-mitotic cells. Here we present MitoFlare, a mitochondria-targeted, reversible mtROS-responsive fluorogenic probe that enables continuous, non-genetic visualization of mitochondrial oxidative activation and turnover. MitoFlare incorporates dual TEMPO nitroxide quenchers into a long-wavelength rhodamine scaffold, producing >95% basal quenching and rapid, fully reversible fluorescence activation in response to mitochondrial superoxide, hydroxyl radicals, lipid-derived peroxyl species, and peroxynitrite. When combined with LysoTracker Green, MitoFlare forms a dual-probe imaging platform that resolves the entire mitophagy cascade with high spatial and temporal fidelity in intact PC12 neuronal cells. Using this platform, we established a quantitative framework comprising three mechanistically distinct metrics: (i) a proximity index that reports early mitochondrial engagement with lysosomes, (ii) Manders' M1 coefficient that captures mid-stage mitochondria-lysosome fusion and mitophagosome formation, and (iii) a quenching/swelling index that resolves terminal lysosomal degradation. Nutrient deprivation induced a complete, temporally ordered mitophagy program, including mtROS priming, Parkin-OPTN-associated fusion, and efficient acidification-dependent cargo degradation. In contrast, inhibition of v-ATPase with bafilomycin A1 arrested mitophagy at the fusion stage, resulting in persistent redox-active mitochondrial cargo that failed to undergo lysosomal digestion. Importantly, MitoFlare's reversible redox chemistry uniquely revealed accumulation of undegraded, oxidatively active mitochondrial remnants within non-acidified vesicles-pathological intermediates that are undetectable using irreversible ROS dyes or genetically encoded reporters. These findings demonstrate that mitophagy proceeds through discrete, redox-regulated and lysosome-dependent phases that can be quantitatively mapped in real time. By enabling synchronized measurement of oxidative activation, organelle trafficking, fusion, and degradation, the MitoFlare-LysoTracker system establishes a new benchmark for dynamic mitophagy analysis in physiologically relevant models. This platform provides a powerful foundation for mechanistic interrogation of mitochondrial quality control and for accelerating the discovery of therapeutic strategies aimed at restoring mitophagic fidelity in neurodegenerative, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.11.18.689025
  20. Sci Rep. 2025 Dec 01. 15(1): 42939
      Mitochondrial glutathione (mtGSH) supports iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) stability in the electron transport chain (ETC). Here we have investigated the role of the mtGSH transporter SLC25A40 in macrophage activation. SLC25A40 is present in both murine and human macrophages and its expression was increased by LPS treatment. Reducing SLC25A40 expression using siRNA destabilized ISC-rich ETC proteins and elevated mitochondrial and cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). It also induced expression of the genes Gclc and Gclm, which are involved in GSH biosynthesis. SLC25A40 deficiency also diminished IL-1β and IL-10 production at the transcriptional level in response to LPS. As a result, the production of mature IL-1β was decreased following activation of NLRP3 by nigericin or ATP, with no effect on pyroptosis. Depleting mtGSH with mitochondrially-targeted CDNB phenocopied these defects, whereas supplementation with a cell-permeable GSH ester partially restored pro-IL-1β production. Together, these data identify SLC25A40 as a key regulator that sustains ETC integrity to promote cytokine production, revealing a previously unrecognized role for the SLC25A40-mtGSH axis in coupling mitochondrial redox control to macrophage activation.
    Keywords:  Cytokine; Electron transport chain (ETC); Glutathione (GSH); Macrophage immunometabolism; Mitochondria; SLC25A39/40
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-30333-6
  21. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Dec 09. 122(49): e2516288122
      Glucose is catabolized by two major metabolic pathways, glycolysis and the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (oxPPP). The oxPPP generates nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) at two steps, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), the most common enzyme deficiency in humans, and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGD). Previous literature suggests that G6PD supports but PGD limits T cell-mediated immunity. Here, we use T cell-specific knockout mouse models to show that both enzymes are required for antitumor immunity and response to immunotherapy. PGD knockout depletes mature T cells systemically, while G6PD loss does not reduce basal T cell populations but results in apoptosis upon activation. Such apoptosis is not reversed by major downstream products of the oxPPP, including antioxidants, nucleosides, or fatty acids. Instead, T cells are partially rescued by removal of media cystine, whose reduction requires NADPH. G6PD loss induces an oxidative stress response that upregulates cystine import, which together with low NADPH leads to fatal disulfide stress. Overall, these results highlight an essential role for the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in cystine homeostasis and T cell-mediated immunity.
    Keywords:  NADPH; T cell activation; T cell antitumor immunity; disulfide stress; oxidative pentose phosphate pathway
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2516288122
  22. Sci Rep. 2025 Dec 05.
      Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a common yet underdiagnosed disease of the small brain vessels, resulting in acute vascular events as well as subcortical neurodegeneration. Currently, it is identified only at advanced stages due to the limitations of non-invasive diagnostic tools. Our pilot study evaluates metabolic and immune alterations in stroke patients with imaging-confirmed CAA. This prospective cohort study included stroke patients admitted to the University Hospital Erlangen with CAA diagnosis based on MRI findings. Metabolomic analysis of cerebrospinal fluid and serum samples was performed using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry, focusing on caffeine metabolism and amino acid pathways. Immunophenotyping of leukocytes was conducted via flow cytometry. The study included 22 stroke patients, of whom 10 had an MRI-based diagnosis of CAA. Metabolomic analysis revealed consistently lower levels of caffeine-related metabolites in CAA patients with significant differences in 5-acetylamino-6-amino-3-methyluracil, paraxanthine, theobromine, 3,7-dimethyluric acid, 3-methylxanthine and 1-methylxanthine. Amino acid levels showed no significant differences. Immunophenotyping revealed a reduction in CD4+ T cell subsets, including effector and central memory T cells, alongside an increase in cytotoxic NK cells in CAA patients. These results suggest that specific metabolic and immune signatures could contribute to the development of diagnostic tools for the detection of CAA.
    Keywords:  Caffeine pathway; Cerebral amyloid angiopathy; Immunphenotyping; Metabolomics
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-31107-w
  23. Glia. 2026 Feb;74(2): e70110
      Astrocytes critically influence ischemic stroke outcomes through calcium signaling-dependent mechanisms, which can be both beneficial and detrimental. Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), a key regulator of store-operated calcium entry, has emerged as an essential mediator of intracellular calcium dynamics in astrocytes, yet its role in acute stroke remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that conditional knockout of astrocytic STIM1 in mice dramatically reduces infarct volume and improves neurological function following ischemic stroke. In vivo two-photon imaging revealed that astrocytic STIM1 knockout reduces the amplitude and duration of both spreading depolarization-associated and spontaneous calcium transients during acute ischemia. The reduction of these transients was highly correlated with improved neurological outcomes. Furthermore, the astrocytic STIM1 knockout mitigated excitotoxic stress by accelerating glutamate clearance and reducing total glutamate burden during ischemic stroke. Our findings establish astrocytic STIM1 as a critical regulator of calcium and glutamate dynamics during ischemic stroke, and therefore, targeting astrocytic STIM1 represents a promising therapeutic avenue for alleviating ischemic brain damage by reducing calcium overload and glutamate excitotoxicity.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.70110
  24. Sci Rep. 2025 Dec 03.
      Intraperitoneal administration of high doses of basic amino acids, such as L-lysine (L-Lys), L-arginine (L-Arg) or L-ornithine (L-Orn) induces acute pancreatitis in rodents. Although the exact mechanism of their action is not fully understood, the role of mitochondria has been implicated. We aimed to investigate the effects of basic amino acids, particularly L-Lys, on isolated pancreatic acinar cells. Isolated mouse or rat pancreatic acinar cells were treated with high concentrations (10-60 mM) of L-Lys, L-Arg or L-Orn. The morphology of acinar mitochondria was observed by electron microscopy. The function of mitochondria was assessed by mitochondrial membrane potential (∆Ψm) and cellular ATP level measurements. Changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), trypsin activity and cellular viabilities were also determined. Treatment of acinar cells with L-Lys caused mitochondrial swelling. L-Lys and L-Arg markedly decreased ∆Ψm after 6 h of treatment, whereas L-Orn had a less pronounced effect than L-Lys or L-Arg. Intracellular ATP levels were also reduced by basic amino acids. L-Lys did not alter [Ca2+]i and did not induce early trypsinogen activation. Furthermore, L-Lys administration primarily caused acinar necrosis. Overall, L-Lys primarily damaged pancreatic acinar mitochondria and caused necrotic cell death without affecting the initial [Ca2+]i.
    Keywords:  Acute pancreatitis; Basic amino acids; L-arginine; L-lysine; L-ornithine; Pancreatic acinar cells
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-29890-7
  25. Trends Immunol. 2025 Dec 01. pii: S1471-4906(25)00285-6. [Epub ahead of print]
      The interaction between the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) and the tumor determines whether immune evasion or antitumor immunity prevails. Metabolic reprogramming is increasingly recognized as a critical factor shaping the tumor immune response. Glucose metabolism regulates the intrinsic cellular states of both immune and tumor cells, while simultaneously shaping the surrounding microenvironment. The glycolytic diversity of immune and tumor cells drives the complexity of the TIME. In this Review, we explore how glucose metabolism remodels the TIME and how these metabolic alterations influence immune effector function and immune evasion. We also highlight the potential for integrating microenvironmental modulation as a promising therapeutic strategy in glucose-targeted cancer therapies.
    Keywords:  glucose metabolism; glucose metabolism-targeted therapies; tumor immune microenvironment
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.it.2025.11.002
  26. PLoS One. 2025 ;20(12): e0335906
      The kynurenine pathway (KP) is the canonical route by which tryptophan is metabolised, almost all of which occurs in the liver, with significant expression of its enzymes also known in the kidney. We generated two novel mouse models for inducible global knockout of midpoint KP enzyme kynurenine-3-monooxygenase (KMO) and endpoint enzyme quinolinate phosphoribosyltransferase (QPRT; converts known neurotoxic KP metabolite Quinolinic acid to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) precursor via the de novo synthesis pathway). The KP is dysregulated in many renal and hepatic disorders, but as an essential step prior to use in disease studies, we set out to characterise their basal KP metabolome and investigate any changes to their overall phenotype in the liver and kidney, free of exogenous inflammatory stimuli. Both enzyme knockouts caused rapid alterations in accumulation of blood metabolite levels upstream of the affected enzyme, although downstream metabolite concentrations were surprisingly unaffected. KMO knockout elevated kynurenine, kynurenic acid and anthranilic acid, while QPRT knockout elevated quinolinic acid. Regardless of these significant metabolic alterations, histological examination of liver and kidney tissues, standard clinical blood chemistry and gross animal observations indicated no evidence of pathological changes in both the renal and hepatic systems. Our findings suggest that in a timeframe of 1-5 weeks and without evoked inflammation, robust homeostatic mechanisms can accommodate substantial fluctuations in KP metabolite concentrations in knockout mice without affecting renal or hepatic structure or function.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0335906
  27. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Dec 09. 122(49): e2505653122
      Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly aggressive and metastatic form of breast cancer that lacks an effective targeted therapy. To identify potential therapeutic targets, we investigated the phosphohistidine phosphatase, LHPP, which has been implicated in the development of several types of cancer. However, the full significance of LHPP in cancer progression remains unclear due to our limited understanding of its molecular mechanism. We found that levels of the LHPP phosphohistidine phosphatase were significantly increased in human breast cancer patients compared to normal adjacent tissues, with the highest levels in the TNBC subtype. When LHPP was knocked out in the MDA-MB-231 human TNBC cell line, cell proliferation, wound healing capacity, and invasion were significantly reduced. However, LHPP knockout in TNBC cells did not significantly affect overall phosphohistidine protein levels. Interestingly, LHPP knockout in MDA-MB-231 cells delayed tumor growth and reduced metastasis when orthotopically transplanted into mouse mammary glands. To investigate LHPP's role in breast cancer progression, we used next-generation sequencing and proximity-labeling proteomics, and found that LHPP regulates gene expression in chemokine-mediated signaling and actin cytoskeleton organization. Depletion of LHPP reduced the presence of tumor-infiltrating macrophages in mouse xenografts. Our results support a tumor promoter role for LHPP phosphohistidine phosphatase in MDA-MB-231TNBC cells and suggest that targeting LHPP phosphatase could be a potential therapeutic strategy for TNBC.
    Keywords:  LHPP; TNBC; phosphatase; phosphohistidine
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2505653122
  28. Cell. 2025 Nov 28. pii: S0092-8674(25)01251-6. [Epub ahead of print]
      The combination of innate immune activation and metabolic disruption plays critical roles in many diseases, often leading to mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress that drive pathogenesis. However, mechanistic regulation under these conditions remains poorly defined. Here, we report a distinct lytic cell death mechanism induced by innate immune signaling and metabolic disruption, independent of caspase activity and previously described pyroptosis, PANoptosis, necroptosis, ferroptosis, and oxeiptosis. Instead, mitochondria undergoing BAX/BAK1/BID-dependent oxidative stress maintained prolonged plasma membrane contact, leading to local oxidative damage, a process we termed mitoxyperiosis. This process then caused membrane lysis and cell death, termed mitoxyperilysis. mTORC2 regulated the cell death, and mTOR inhibition restored cytoskeletal activity for lamellipodia to retract and mobilize mitochondria away from the membrane, preserving integrity. Activating this pathway in vivo regressed tumors in an mTORC2-dependent manner. Overall, our results identify a lytic cell death modality in response to the synergism of innate immune signaling and metabolic disruption.
    Keywords:  carbon starvation; cytokine; inflammasome; inflammatory cell death; innate immunity; mTOR; metabolism; mitochondria; oxidative damage; tumor
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2025.11.002
  29. Elife. 2025 Dec 01. pii: RP108181. [Epub ahead of print]14
      Cells experience strong variations in the consumption and availability of inorganic phosphate (Pi). Since Pi is an essential macronutrient but excess Pi has negative impacts on nucleotide hydrolysis and metabolism, its concentration must be maintained in a suitable range. Conserved storage organelles, acidocalcisomes, provide this buffering function. We used acidocalcisome-like yeast vacuoles to study how such organelles are set up to perform this task. Our combined in vitro and in vivo analyses revealed that their ATP-driven polyphosphate polymerase VTC converts cytosolic Pi into inorganic polyphosphates (polyP), which it transfers into the vacuole lumen. Luminal polyphosphatases immediately hydrolyse this polyP to establish a growing reservoir of vacuolar Pi. Product inhibition by this Pi pool silences the polyphosphatases, caps Pi accumulation, and favours vacuolar polyP storage. Upon cytosolic Pi scarcity, the declining inositol pyrophosphate levels activate the vacuolar Pi exporter Pho91 to replenish cytosolic Pi. In this way, acidocalcisome-like vacuoles constitute a feedback-regulated buffering system for cytosolic Pi, which the cells can switch between Pi accumulation, Pi release, and high-capacity phosphate storage through polyP.
    Keywords:  S. cerevisiae; SPX; acidocalcisome; cell biology; energy metabolism; phosphate homeostasis; polyphosphate; vacuole
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.108181