RRC ID 6950
Author Hughes SL, Bundy JG, Want EJ, Kille P, Stürzenbaum SR.
Title The metabolomic responses of Caenorhabditis elegans to cadmium are largely independent of metallothionein status, but dominated by changes in cystathionine and phytochelatins.
Journal J Proteome Res
Abstract Cadmium is a widely distributed toxic environmental pollutant. Using proton NMR spectroscopy and UPLC-MS, we obtained metabolic profiles from the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans exposed to sublethal concentrations of cadmium. Neither in the presence nor absence of cadmium did the metallothionein status (single or double mtl knockouts) markedly modulate the metabolic profile. However, independent of strain, cadmium exposure resulted in a decrease in cystathionine concentrations and an increase in the nonribosomally synthesized peptides phytochelatin-2 and phytochelatin-3. This suggests that a primary response to low levels of cadmium is the differential regulation of the C. elegans trans-sulfuration pathway, which channels the flux from methionine through cysteine into phytochelatin synthesis. These results were backed up by the finding that phytochelatin synthase mutants (pcs-1) were at least an order of magnitude more sensitive to cadmium than single or double metallothionein mutants. However, an additive sensitivity toward cadmium was observed in the mtl-1; mtl-2; pcs-1 triple mutant.
Volume 8(7)
Pages 3512-9
Published 2009-7-1
DOI 10.1021/pr9001806
PMID 19466807
MeSH Animals Animals, Genetically Modified Cadmium / chemistry Cadmium / metabolism* Caenorhabditis elegans / genetics* Caenorhabditis elegans / metabolism Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / chemistry* Cystathionine / chemistry* Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Mass Spectrometry / methods Metabolomics* Metallothionein / chemistry* Multivariate Analysis Mutation Phytochelatins / chemistry*
IF 4.074
Times Cited 84
WOS Category BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS
Resource
C.elegans tm1770 tm1748