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Publication : Serine Catabolism Feeds NADH when Respiration Is Impaired.

First Author  Yang L Year  2020
Journal  Cell Metab Volume  31
Issue  4 Pages  809-821.e6
PubMed ID  32187526 Mgi Jnum  J:287118
Mgi Id  MGI:6406559 Doi  10.1016/j.cmet.2020.02.017
Citation  Yang L, et al. (2020) Serine Catabolism Feeds NADH when Respiration Is Impaired. Cell Metab 31(4):809-821.e6
abstractText  NADH provides electrons for aerobic ATP production. In cells deprived of oxygen or with impaired electron transport chain activity, NADH accumulation can be toxic. To minimize such toxicity, elevated NADH inhibits the classical NADH-producing pathways: glucose, glutamine, and fat oxidation. Here, through deuterium-tracing studies in cultured cells and mice, we show that folate-dependent serine catabolism also produces substantial NADH. Strikingly, when respiration is impaired, serine catabolism through methylene tetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase (MTHFD2) becomes a major NADH source. In cells whose respiration is slowed by hypoxia, metformin, or genetic lesions, mitochondrial serine catabolism inhibition partially normalizes NADH levels and facilitates cell growth. In mice with engineered mitochondrial complex I deficiency (NDUSF4-/-), serine's contribution to NADH is elevated, and progression of spasticity is modestly slowed by pharmacological blockade of serine degradation. Thus, when respiration is impaired, serine catabolism contributes to toxic NADH accumulation.
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