Ommi Naidu B, Mattocks Dwight A L, Kalecký Karel, Bottiglieri Teodoro, Nichenametla Sailendra N
Animal Science Laboratory, Orentreich Foundation for the Advancement of Science Inc., Cold Spring-on-Hudson, NY 10516, USA.
Center of Metabolomics, Institute of Metabolic Disease, Baylor Scott and White Research Institute, Dallas, TX 75204, USA.
Aging (Albany NY). 2025 Apr 7;17(4):960-981. doi: 10.18632/aging.206237.
Sulfur amino acid restriction (SAAR), lowering the dietary concentration of sulfur amino acids methionine and cysteine, induces strong anti-obesity effects in rodents. Due to difficulties in formulating the SAAR diet for human consumption, its translation is challenging. Since our previous studies suggest a mechanistic role for low glutathione (GSH) in SAAR-induced anti-obesity effects, we investigated if the pharmacological lowering of GSH recapitulates the lean phenotype in mice on a sulfur amino acid-replete diet. Male obese C57BL6/NTac mice were fed high-fat diets with 0.86% methionine (CD), 0.12% methionine (SAAR), SAAR diet supplemented with a GSH biosynthetic precursor, N-acetylcysteine in water (NAC), and CD supplemented with a GSH biosynthetic inhibitor, DL-buthionine-(S, R)-sulfoximine in water (BSO). The SAAR diet lowered hepatic GSH but increased Nrf2, Phgdh, and serine. These molecular changes culminated in lower hepatic lipid droplet frequency, epididymal fat depot weights, and body fat mass; NAC reversed all these changes. BSO mice exhibited all SAAR-induced changes, with two notable differences, i.e., a smaller effect size than that of the SAAR diet and a higher predilection for molecular changes in kidneys than in the liver. Metabolomics data indicate that BSO and the SAAR diet induce similar changes in the kidney. Unaltered plasma aspartate and alanine transaminases and cystatin-C indicate that long-term continuous administration of BSO is safe. Data demonstrate that BSO recapitulates the SAAR-induced anti-obesity effects and that GSH plays a mechanistic role. BSO dose-response studies in animals and pilot studies in humans to combat obesity are highly warranted.
限制含硫氨基酸(SAAR),即降低饮食中甲硫氨酸和半胱氨酸这两种含硫氨基酸的浓度,可在啮齿动物中产生强大的抗肥胖作用。由于难以配制供人类食用的SAAR饮食,将其转化应用具有挑战性。鉴于我们之前的研究表明低水平的谷胱甘肽(GSH)在SAAR诱导的抗肥胖作用中具有机制性作用,我们研究了在富含含硫氨基酸的饮食中,通过药物手段降低GSH是否能使小鼠重现瘦体型。给雄性肥胖C57BL6/NTac小鼠喂食高脂饮食,分别含有0.86%甲硫氨酸(对照饮食,CD)、0.12%甲硫氨酸(SAAR饮食)、在饮水中添加GSH生物合成前体N-乙酰半胱氨酸(NAC)的SAAR饮食,以及在饮水中添加GSH生物合成抑制剂丁硫氨酸-(S,R)-亚砜胺(BSO)的对照饮食。SAAR饮食降低了肝脏中的GSH水平,但增加了Nrf2、磷酸甘油酸脱氢酶(Phgdh)和丝氨酸水平。这些分子变化最终导致肝脏脂质滴频率降低、附睾脂肪储存重量减轻和体脂量减少;NAC逆转了所有这些变化。BSO处理的小鼠表现出所有SAAR诱导的变化,但有两个显著差异,即效应大小比SAAR饮食小,且肾脏中分子变化的倾向高于肝脏。代谢组学数据表明,BSO和SAAR饮食在肾脏中诱导相似的变化。血浆天冬氨酸转氨酶、丙氨酸转氨酶和胱抑素-C未改变,表明长期连续给予BSO是安全的。数据表明,BSO重现了SAAR诱导的抗肥胖作用,且GSH发挥了机制性作用。非常有必要在动物中进行BSO剂量反应研究以及在人类中开展对抗肥胖的初步研究。