Organ-specific electrophile responsivity mapping in live C. elegans
- PMID: 39504959
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2024.10.014
Organ-specific electrophile responsivity mapping in live C. elegans
Abstract
Proximity labeling technologies are limited to indexing localized protein residents. Such data-although valuable-cannot inform on small-molecule responsivity of local residents. We here bridge this gap by demonstrating in live C. elegans how electrophile-sensing propensity in specific organs can be quantitatively mapped and ranked. Using this method, >70% of tissue-specific responders exhibit electrophile responsivity, independent of tissue-specific abundance. One responder, cyp-33e1-for which both human and worm orthologs are electrophile responsive-marshals stress-dependent gut functions, despite manifesting uniform abundance across all tissues studied. Cyp-33e1's localized electrophile responsivity operates site specifically, triggering multifaceted responses: electrophile sensing through the catalytic-site cysteine results in partitioning between enzyme inhibition and localized production of a critical metabolite that governs global lipid availability, whereas rapid dual-cysteine site-specific sensing modulates gut homeostasis. Beyond pinpointing chemical actionability within local proteomes, organ-specific electrophile responsivity mapping illuminates otherwise intractable locale-specific metabolite signaling and stress response programs influencing organ-specific decision-making.
Keywords: 4-hydroxynonenal; C. elegans; cytochrome P450; function-guided spatial mapping; organ-specific responsivity profiling; proximity labeling proteomics; reactive metabolite signaling; tissue-specific stress response.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests.
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