Aldehyde-mediated inhibition of asparagine biosynthesis has implications for diabetes and alcoholism

Patients with alcoholism and type 2 diabetes manifest altered metabolism, including elevated aldehyde levels and unusually low asparagine levels. We show that asparagine synthetase B (ASNS), the only human asparagine-forming enzyme, is inhibited by disease-relevant reactive aldehydes, including form...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John, T, Saffoon, N, Walsby-Tickle, J, Hester, SS, Dingler, FA, Millington, CL, McCullagh, JSO, Patel, KJ, Hopkinson, RJ, Schofield, CJ
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Royal Society of Chemistry 2024
Description
Summary:Patients with alcoholism and type 2 diabetes manifest altered metabolism, including elevated aldehyde levels and unusually low asparagine levels. We show that asparagine synthetase B (ASNS), the only human asparagine-forming enzyme, is inhibited by disease-relevant reactive aldehydes, including formaldehyde and acetaldehyde. Cellular studies show non-cytotoxic amounts of reactive aldehydes induce a decrease in asparagine levels. Biochemical analyses reveal inhibition results from reaction of the aldehydes with the catalytically important N-terminal cysteine of ASNS. The combined cellular and biochemical results suggest a possible mechanism underlying the low asparagine levels in alcoholism and diabetes. The results will stimulate research on the biological consequences of the reactions of aldehydes with nucleophilic residues.