This report characterizes and quantifies
endogenous hydrogen sulfide
(H2S) and small oxoacids of sulfur (SOS = HOSH, HOSOH)
in a panel of cell lines including human cancer (A375 melanoma cells,
HeLa cervical cells) and noncancer (HEK293 embryonic kidney cells),
as well as E. coli DH5α and S. cerevisiae S288C. The methodology used is a translation of well-studied nucleophilic
and electrophilic traps for cysteine and oxidized cysteines residues
to target small molecular weight sulfur species; mass spectrometric
analysis allows for species quantification. The observed intracellular
concentrations of H2S and SOS vary in different cell types,
from nanomolar to femtomolar, typically with H2S > HOSOH
> HOSH. We propose the term sulfome, a subset of the metabolome,
describing
the nonproteinaceous metabolites of H2S; the sulfomic index
is as a measure of the S-oxide redox status, which gives a profile
of endogenous sulfur at different oxidation states. An important observation
is that H2S and SOS were found to be continuously extruded
into surrounding media against a concentration gradient, implying
an active efflux process. Small molecule inhibition of several H2S generating enzymes suggest that SOS are not derived solely
from H2S oxidation. Even after successful inhibition of
H2S production, cells maintain constant efflux and repopulate
H2S and SOS over time. This work proves that these small
sulfur oxoacids are generated in cells of all types, and their efflux
implies that they play a role in cell signaling and possibly other
vascular physiology attributed to H2S.
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is an endogenous signaling molecule which is important for cardiovascular health, but its mechanism of action remains poorly understood. Here, we report measurements of H2S as well as its oxidized metabolites, termed small oxoacids of sulfur (SOS = HSOH and HOSOH), in four human primary vascular cell lines: smooth muscle and endothelial cells derived from both human arterial and coronary tissues. We use a methodology that targets small molecular weight sulfur species; mass spectrometric analysis allows for species quantification to report cellular concentrations based on an H2S calibration curve. The production of H2S and SOS is orders of magnitude higher in smooth muscle (nanomolar) as compared to endothelial cell lines (picomolar). In all the primary lines measured, the distributions of these three species were HOSOH >H2S > HSOH, with much higher SOS than seen previously in non-vascular cell lines. H2S and SOS were effluxed from smooth muscle cells in higher concentrations than endothelial cells. Aortic smooth muscle cells were used to examine changes under hypoxic growth conditions. Hypoxia caused notable increases in HSOH and ROS, which we attribute to enhanced sulfide quinone oxidase activity that results in reverse electron transport.
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