New & Noteworthy

The Cellular Hunger Games

November 07, 2013

In the Hunger Games, limited resources mean only the privileged get them. The same is true for methyl groups in yeast and human cells…when in short supply, they are only available to the chosen few. Image by Eva Rinaldi obtained from Wikimedia Commons.

We all know that it’s important to get enough vitamins in our diet. Scary-sounding conditions like scurvy, rickets, and beriberi can all happen when you don’t get enough of them.  And that’s not all.

Fairly recently, scientists discovered that when pregnant women get too little folate, their children are at a higher risk for neural tube defects. This connection is so strong that since 1998, the U.S. and Canada have successfully reduced the number of neural tube defects by adding extra folate to grain products.

While these kinds of effects are easy to see, it’s not always so obvious what is going on at the molecular level. But in a new study in GENETICS, Sadhu and coworkers showed that folate and methionine deficiencies can affect us right down to our DNA. And of course, they figured this out by starting with our little friend S. cerevisiae.

Folate and its related compound methionine are pretty important molecules in cellular metabolism. You need folate to make purine nucleotides, and it is essential for keeping just the right levels of methionine in a cell.

And methionine is, of course, one of the essential amino acid building blocks of proteins. But it is more than that. It’s also the precursor for S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM), which provides the methyl groups for protein methylation.

Protein methylation is a big deal for all sorts of things.  But one of its most important jobs is undoubtedly controlling levels of gene expression through methylation of histones.   

Since folate or methionine deficiency should affect SAM levels, in principle they could affect histone methylation too. But so far this connection had never been shown directly. Sadhu and colleagues set out to see what happens when you deprive S. cerevisiae of these nutrients.

Unlike humans, yeast can synthesize both folate and methionine. So the first step was to make folate- and methionine-requiring strains by deleting the FOL3 or MET2 genes, respectively. These mutant yeast strains couldn’t grow unless they were fed folate or methionine.

Now it was possible to starve these mutant strains by giving them low levels of the nutrients they needed. Starvation for either folate or methionine caused the methylation of a specific lysine residue (K4) of histone H3 to be reduced. Not only that, but expression of specific genes was lower, consistent with their reduced histone methylation.

To see how general this effect was, the authors performed essentially the same experiments in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, which is about as evolutionarily distant from S. cerevisiae as you can get and still be a yeast. In this beast, methionine deficiency also reduced histone methylation. For unknown reasons, folate deficiency didn’t have a significant effect. 

Sadhu and coworkers wondered whether this effect was so general that they could even see it in human cells. Since humans are folate and methionine auxotrophs, this experiment was easier to set up. When they grew human cells with starvation levels of folate or methionine, their histone methylation and gene expression were both reduced. So starvation conditions have an impact right down to the level of gene expression, across a wide range of organisms.

The simple explanation for this effect would be that reduced folate leads to reduced SAM levels, and therefore fewer methyl groups are available to modify histones. But the researchers got a surprise when they measured intracellular SAM levels in S. cerevisiae under the starvation conditions: they were the same as in wild type! This conclusion was so surprising that they tried two different, sophisticated methods, but both gave the same result.

They explain this by postulating a kind of metabolic triage.  Basically, the cell maintains a certain level of SAM in the cell but there is a pecking order for who gets to use it.  At very low nutrient levels, the cell uses the available folate or methionine for the most essential processes such as purine synthesis or translation, and sacrifices histone methylation. As more nutrients become available, then other less critical functions can use them.

This kind of triage might provide an explanation for the link between folate deficiency and neural tube defects, and also for the effectiveness of antifolates against cancer. And it adds to the growing body of evidence that environmental conditions such as famine can have effects that persist across generations. This is an important reminder that any decisions we make today about feeding the hungry could have consequences that reach far into the future.

by Maria Costanzo, Ph.D., Senior Biocurator, SGD

Categories: Research Spotlight

Tags: folate, methylation, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, starvation

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