Cells at the Edge

In the tiny Wall Streets of our cells, proteins engage in a brisk electron trade. Some sell, becoming oxidized, and some buy, becoming reduced.

Research has indicated that balancing this market is critical; too much oxidation has been linked to age-related diseases including cancer, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and diabetes.

It would make sense, then, that cells need a buffer to help stabilize oxidation. For more than 50 years, scientific literature has avowed that the buffer is a substance called glutathione.

A new study from Harvard Medical School just turned that dogma on its head.

Image: EdStock/iStock

Based on studies of the microscopic worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the team reported in Nature Communications that glutathione is actually the opposite of a buffer: It serves as a highly sensitive dial that can turn up or turn down oxidation based on the inputs it receives. Rather than stabilizing cost, the glutathione system adjusts the price of electrons based on subtle fluctuations in the market.

“Instead of being in a comfortable buffer zone, cells are right at the knife’s edge,” said Javier Apfeld, HMS instructor in systems biology and co-senior author of the paper. “This was really unexpected.”

After digesting their surprising discovery, the authors went a step further and argued that cells may not need an oxidation buffer at all.

“Protein oxidation has been considered a type of damage to be avoided. Our results suggest that protein oxidation is instead a system of information flow,” said Catalina Romero, research fellow in systems biology at HMS and first author of the paper. “Rather than repairing damage, glutathione may be communicating change.”

What may be happening in diseases of dysregulated oxidation, the authors proposed, is that glutathione relays miniscule changes too loudly. “It’s yelling things that wouldn’t normally be audible in the cell,” Romero said.

This study “provides a framework to reinterpret decades of data” about glutathione, said Apfeld. “It helped us open our eyes. In retrospect, this role for glutathione is obvious.”

“This is very thought-provoking science that may necessitate revisiting the perspective offered in some textbooks,” said Walter Fontana, HMS professor of systems biology and co-senior author of the paper.

The findings could have ramifications for the study and treatment of oxidation in age-related diseases and even the use of antioxidant supplements.

Continue Reading Here...