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Dive into the research topics where Sushabhan Sadhukhan is active.

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Featured researches published by Sushabhan Sadhukhan.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Metabolic Characterization of a Sirt5 deficient mouse model

Jiujiu Yu; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Lilia G. Noriega; Norman Moullan; Bin He; Robert S. Weiss; Hening Lin; Kristina Schoonjans; Johan Auwerx

Sirt5, localized in the mitochondria, is a member of sirtuin family of NAD+-dependent deacetylases. Sirt5 was shown to deacetylate and activate carbamoyl phosphate synthase 1. Most recently, Sirt5 was reported to be the predominant protein desuccinylase and demalonylase in the mitochondria because the ablation of Sirt5 enhanced the global succinylation and malonylation of mitochondrial proteins, including many metabolic enzymes. In order to determine the physiological role of Sirt5 in metabolic homeostasis, we generated a germline Sirt5 deficient (Sirt5−/−) mouse model and performed a thorough metabolic characterization of this mouse line. Although a global protein hypersuccinylation and elevated serum ammonia during fasting were observed in our Sirt5−/− mouse model, Sirt5 deficiency did not lead to any overt metabolic abnormalities under either chow or high fat diet conditions. These observations suggest that Sirt5 is likely to be dispensable for the metabolic homeostasis under the basal conditions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Metabolomics, Pathway Regulation, and Pathway Discovery

Guo Fang Zhang; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Gregory P. Tochtrop; Henri Brunengraber

Metabolomics is a data-based research strategy, the aims of which are to identify biomarker pictures of metabolic systems and metabolic perturbations and to formulate hypotheses to be tested. It involves the assay by mass spectrometry or NMR of many metabolites present in the biological system investigated. In this minireview, we outline studies in which metabolomics led to useful biomarkers of metabolic processes. We also illustrate how the discovery potential of metabolomics is enhanced by associating it with stable isotopic techniques.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Metabolomics-assisted proteomics identifies succinylation and SIRT5 as important regulators of cardiac function

Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Xiaojing Liu; Dongryeol Ryu; Ornella D. Nelson; John A. Stupinski; Zhi Li; Wei Chen; Sheng Zhang; Robert S. Weiss; Jason W. Locasale; Johan Auwerx; Hening Lin

Significance Lysine succinylation is a recently discovered protein posttranslational modification and SIRT5 is an efficient desuccinylase. Although many mammalian proteins have recently been found to be regulated by lysine succinylation and SIRT5, the physiological significance of succinylation and SIRT5 remains unknown. Here we report that protein lysine succinylation predominantly accumulates in the heart when Sirt5 is deleted. Sirt5-deficient mice exhibit defective fatty acid metabolism, decreased ATP production, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Our data suggest that regulating heart metabolism and function is a major physiological role of lysine succinylation and SIRT5. Cellular metabolites, such as acyl-CoA, can modify proteins, leading to protein posttranslational modifications (PTMs). One such PTM is lysine succinylation, which is regulated by sirtuin 5 (SIRT5). Although numerous proteins are modified by lysine succinylation, the physiological significance of lysine succinylation and SIRT5 remains elusive. Here, by profiling acyl-CoA molecules in various mouse tissues, we have discovered that different tissues have different acyl-CoA profiles and that succinyl-CoA is the most abundant acyl-CoA molecule in the heart. This interesting observation has prompted us to examine protein lysine succinylation in different mouse tissues in the presence and absence of SIRT5. Protein lysine succinylation predominantly accumulates in the heart when Sirt5 is deleted. Using proteomic studies, we have identified many cardiac proteins regulated by SIRT5. Our data suggest that ECHA, a protein involved in fatty acid oxidation, is a major enzyme that is regulated by SIRT5 and affects heart function. Sirt5 knockout (KO) mice have lower ECHA activity, increased long-chain acyl-CoAs, and decreased ATP in the heart under fasting conditions. Sirt5 KO mice develop hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, as evident from the increased heart weight relative to body weight, as well as reduced shortening and ejection fractions. These findings establish that regulating heart metabolism and function is a major physiological function of lysine succinylation and SIRT5.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Catabolism of 4-hydroxyacids and 4-hydroxynonenal via 4-hydroxy-4-phosphoacyl-CoAs.

Guo Fang Zhang; Rajan S. Kombu; Takhar Kasumov; Yong Han; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Jianye Zhang; Lawrence M. Sayre; Dale Ray; K. Michael Gibson; Vernon A. Anderson; Gregory P. Tochtrop; Henri Brunengraber

4-Hydroxyacids are products of ubiquitously occurring lipid peroxidation (C9, C6) or drugs of abuse (C4, C5). We investigated the catabolism of these compounds using a combination of metabolomics and mass isotopomer analysis. Livers were perfused with various concentrations of unlabeled and labeled saturated 4-hydroxyacids (C4 to C11) or 4-hydroxynonenal. All the compounds tested form a new class of acyl-CoA esters, 4-hydroxy-4-phosphoacyl-CoAs, characterized by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, accurate mass spectrometry, and 31P-NMR. All 4-hydroxyacids with five or more carbons are metabolized by two new pathways. The first and major pathway, which involves 4-hydroxy-4-phosphoacyl-CoAs, leads in six steps to the isomerization of 4-hydroxyacyl-CoA to 3-hydroxyacyl-CoAs. The latter are intermediates of physiological β-oxidation. The second and minor pathway involves a sequence of β-oxidation, α-oxidation, and β-oxidation steps. In mice deficient in succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase, high plasma concentrations of 4-hydroxybutyrate result in high concentrations of 4-hydroxy-4-phospho-butyryl-CoA in brain and liver. The high concentration of 4-hydroxy-4-phospho-butyryl-CoA may be related to the cerebral dysfunction of subjects ingesting 4-hydroxybutyrate and to the mental retardation of patients with 4-hydroxybutyric aciduria. Our data illustrate the potential of the combination of metabolomics and mass isotopomer analysis for pathway discovery.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2011

Isotopomer enrichment assay for very short chain fatty acids and its metabolic applications.

Kristyen Tomcik; Rafael A. Ibarra; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Yong Han; Gregory P. Tochtrop; Guo Fang Zhang

The present work illustrated an accurate GC/MS measurement for the low isotopomer enrichment assay of formic acid, acetic acid, propionic aicd, butyric acid, and pentanoic acid. The pentafluorobenzyl bromide derivatives of these very short chain fatty acids have high sensitivity of isotopoic enrichment due to their low natural isotopomer distribution in negative chemical ionization mass spectrometric mode. Pentafluorobenzyl bromide derivatization reaction was optimized in terms of pH, temperature, reaction time, and the amount of pentafluorobenzyl bromide versus sample. The precision, stability, and accuracy of this method for the isotopomer analysis were validated. This method was applied to measure the enrichments of formic acid, acetic acid, and propionic acid in the perfusate from rat liver exposed to Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer only, 0-1mM [3,4-(13)C(2)]-4-hydroxynonanoate, and 0-2mM [5,6,7-(13)C(3)]heptanoate. The enrichments of acetic acid and propionic acid in the perfusate are comparable to the labeling pattern of acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA in the rat liver tissues. The enrichment of the acetic acid assay is much more sensitive and precise than the enrichment of acetyl-CoA by LC-MS/MS. The reversibility of propionyl-CoA from succinyl-CoA was confirmed by the low labeling of M1 and M2 of propionic acid from [5,6,7-(13)C(3)]heptanoate perfusates.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015

High-Resolution Metabolomics with Acyl-CoA Profiling Reveals Widespread Remodeling in Response to Diet

Xiaojing Liu; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Shengyi Sun; Gregory R. Wagner; Matthew D. Hirschey; Ling Qi; Hening Lin; Jason W. Locasale

The availability of acyl-Coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) thioester compounds affects numerous cellular functions including autophagy, lipid oxidation and synthesis, and post-translational modifications. Consequently, the acyl-CoA level changes tend to be associated with other metabolic alterations that regulate these critical cellular functions. Despite their biological importance, this class of metabolites remains difficult to detect and quantify using current analytical methods. Here we show a universal method for metabolomics that allows for the detection of an expansive set of acyl-CoA compounds and hundreds of other cellular metabolites. We apply this method to profile the dynamics of acyl-CoA compounds and corresponding alterations in metabolism across the metabolic network in response to high fat feeding in mice. We identified targeted metabolites (>50) and untargeted features (>1000) with significant changes (FDR < 0.05) in response to diet. A substantial extent of this metabolic remodeling exhibited correlated changes in acyl-CoA metabolism with acyl-carnitine metabolism and other features of the metabolic network that together can lead to the discovery of biomarkers of acyl-CoA metabolism. These findings show a robust acyl-CoA profiling method and identify coordinated changes of acyl-CoA metabolism in response to nutritional stress.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Using isotopic tools to dissect and quantitate parallel metabolic pathways.

Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Yong Han; Guo Fang Zhang; Henri Brunengraber; Gregory P. Tochtrop

4-Hydroxyacids are ubiquitous in human physiology. They are derived from the drugs of abuse gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), gamma-hydroxypentanoate(GHP), in addition to the omnipresent lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-(E)-nonenal (4-HNE). Previously we reported that 4-hydroxyacids are catabolized through two parallel pathways. In this report we detail two isotopic tools that have allowed the dissection of this catabolic process and illustrate how these tools can be used to quantify the relative flux down each pathway. We found that 4-hydroxynonanoate (4-hydroxyacid derived from 4-HNE) is primarly catabolized through a pathway that phosphorylates the C-4 hydroxyl and isomerizes it to a C-3 hydroxy compound, which is catabolized through beta-oxidation.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

SIRT7 Is an RNA-Activated Protein Lysine Deacylase

Zhen Tong; Miao Wang; Yi Wang; David D. Kim; Jennifer K. Grenier; Ji Cao; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Quan Hao; Hening Lin

Mammalian SIRT7 is a member of the sirtuin family that regulates multiple biological processes including genome stability, metabolic pathways, stress responses, and tumorigenesis. SIRT7 has been shown to be important for ribosome biogenesis and transcriptional regulation. SIRT7 knockout mice exhibit complications associated with fatty liver and increased aging in hematopoietic stem cells. However, the molecular basis for its biological function remains unclear, in part due to the lack of efficient enzymatic activity in vitro. Previously, we have demonstrated that double-stranded DNA could activate SIRT7s deacetylase activity in vitro, allowing it to deacetylate H3K18 in the context of chromatin. Here, we show that RNA can increase the catalytic efficiency of SIRT7 even better and that SIRT7 can remove long chain fatty acyl groups more efficiently than removing acetyl groups. Truncation and mutagenesis studies revealed residues at both the amino and carboxyl termini of SIRT7 that are involved in RNA-binding and important for activity. RNA immunoprecipitation-sequencing (RIP-seq) identified ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as the predominant RNA binding partner of SIRT7. The associated RNA was able to effectively activate the deacetylase and defatty-acylase activities of SIRT7. Knockdown of SIRT7 increased the lysine fatty acylation of several nuclear proteins based on metabolic labeling with an alkyne-tagged fatty acid analog, supporting that the defatty-acylase activity of SIRT7 is physiologically relevant. These findings provide important insights into the biological functions of SIRT7, as well as an improved platform to develop SIRT7 modulators.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

SIRT7 Is Activated by DNA and Deacetylates Histone H3 in the Chromatin Context.

Zhen Tong; Yi Wang; Xiaoyu Zhang; David D. Kim; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Quan Hao; Hening Lin

Mammalian sirtuins (SIRT1-7) are members of a highly conserved family of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+))-dependent protein deacetylases that regulate many biological processes including metabolism, genome stability, and transcription. Among the seven human sirtuins, SIRT7 is the least understood, to a large extent due to the lack of enzymatic activity in vitro. Here, we reported that SIRT7 can be activated by DNA to hydrolyze the acetyl group from lysine residues in vitro on histone peptides and histones in the chromatin context. Both N- and C- termini of SIRT7 are important for the DNA-activated deacetylase activity. The regulatory mechanism of SIRT7 is different from that of SIRT6, which also showed increased activity on chromatin substrates, but the deacetylase activity of SIRT6 on a peptide substrate cannot be activated by DNA. This finding provides an improved enzymatic activity assay of SIRT7 that will promote the development of SIRT7 modulators. Further investigation into the activation mechanism of SIRT7 by DNA could provide new insights into its biological function and help the development of sirtuin activators.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Metabolism of Levulinate in Perfused Rat Livers and Live Rats CONVERSION TO THE DRUG OF ABUSE 4-HYDROXYPENTANOATE

Stephanie R. Harris; Guo Fang Zhang; Sushabhan Sadhukhan; Anne M. Murphy; Kristyen Tomcik; Edwin J. Vazquez; Vernon E. Anderson; Gregory P. Tochtrop; Henri Brunengraber

Calcium levulinate (4-ketopentanoate) is used as an oral and parenteral source of calcium. We hypothesized that levulinate is converted in the liver to 4-hydroxypentanoate, a new drug of abuse, and that this conversion is accelerated by ethanol oxidation. We confirmed these hypotheses in live rats, perfused rat livers, and liver subcellular preparations. Levulinate is reduced to (R)-4-hydroxypentanoate by a cytosolic and a mitochondrial dehydrogenase, which are NADPH- and NADH-dependent, respectively. A mitochondrial dehydrogenase or racemase system also forms (S)-4-hydroxypentanoate. In livers perfused with [13C5]levulinate, there was substantial CoA trapping in levulinyl-CoA, 4-hydroxypentanoyl-CoA, and 4-phosphopentanoyl-CoA. This CoA trapping was increased by ethanol, with a 6-fold increase in the concentration of 4-phosphopentanoyl-CoA. Levulinate is catabolized by 3 parallel pathways to propionyl-CoA, acetyl-CoA, and lactate. Most intermediates of the 3 pathways were identified by mass isotopomer analysis and metabolomics. The production of 4-hydroxypentanoate from levulinate and its stimulation by ethanol is a potential public health concern.

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Gregory P. Tochtrop

Case Western Reserve University

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Guo Fang Zhang

Case Western Reserve University

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Henri Brunengraber

Case Western Reserve University

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Hening Lin

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Yong Han

Case Western Reserve University

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Jessica M. Berthiaume

Case Western Reserve University

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Kristyen Tomcik

Case Western Reserve University

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Qingling Li

Case Western Reserve University

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Rafael A. Ibarra

Case Western Reserve University

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Vernon E. Anderson

Case Western Reserve University

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