4.7 Article

Metabolomics Reveals that Cysteine Metabolism Plays a Role in Celastrol-Induced Mitochondrial Apoptosis in HL-60 and NB-4 Cells

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-57312-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81503134, 81872650, 81573182]
  2. Key Natural Science Foundation of the Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions of China [18KJA320003]
  3. Key Project of the Science and Technology Development Foundation of Nanjing Medical University [2014NJMUZD005]
  4. Key Research & Development Plan of Jiangsu Province [BE2017628]
  5. Southeast University [242018K3DN25, 2018DN0025]
  6. Nanjing Medical University Collaborative Research Project [242018K3DN25, 2018DN0025]
  7. Innovation Fund Project of the State Key Laboratory of Reproductive Medicine [SKLRM-GC201901]
  8. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)

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Recently, celastrol has shown great potential for inducing apoptosis in acute myeloid leukemia cells, especially acute promyelocytic leukaemia cells. However, the mechanism is poorly understood. Metabolomics provides an overall understanding of metabolic mechanisms to illustrate celastrol's mechanism of action. We treated both nude mice bearing HL-60 cell xenografts in vivo and HL-60 cells as well as NB-4 cells in vitro with celastrol. Ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry was used for metabolomics analysis of HL-60 cells in vivo and for targeted L-cysteine analysis in HL-60 and NB-4 cells in vitro. Flow cytometric analysis was performed to assess mitochondrial membrane potential, reactive oxygen species and apoptosis. Western blotting was conducted to detect the p53, Bax, cleaved caspase 9 and cleaved caspase 3 proteins. Celastrol inhibited tumour growth, induced apoptosis, and upregulated pro-apoptotic proteins in the xenograft tumour mouse model. Metabolomics showed that cysteine metabolism was the key metabolic alteration after celastrol treatment in HL-60 cells in vivo. Celastrol decreased L-cysteine in HL-60 cells. Acetylcysteine supplementation reversed reactive oxygen species accumulation and apoptosis induced by celastrol and reversed the dramatic decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential and upregulation of pro-apoptotic proteins in HL-60 cells. In NB-4 cells, celastrol decreased L-cysteine, and acetylcysteine reversed celastrol-induced reactive oxygen species accumulation and apoptosis. We are the first to identify the involvement of a cysteine metabolism/reactive oxygen species/p53/Bax/caspase 9/caspase 3 pathway in celastrol-triggered mitochondrial apoptosis in HL-60 and NB-4 cells, providing a novel underlying mechanism through which celastrol could be used to treat acute myeloid leukaemia, especially acute promyelocytic leukaemia.

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