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Despite their biological significance, the study of hydropersulfides (RSSH) is often limited due to their inherent instability. Here, we introduce arylsulfonothioates as thiol activated RSSH donors and provide insight into cellular reactive sulfur species homeostasis. These precursors persulfidate physiologically relevant thiols (RSH) to form the corresponding RSSH. Real-time monitoring of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) generation via membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) was employed to follow RSSH production, revealing that electron-donating aryl substituents marginally slow RSSH release rates, whereas electron-withdrawing substituents slightly accelerate release. Furthermore, arylsulfonothioates with strong electron-withdrawing substituents offer superior protection against doxorubicin (DOX)-induced cardiotoxicity. Experiments using H9c2 cardiomyocytes affirmed the cell-permeability of arylsulfonothioates and their ability to increase intracellular RSSH levels and protein persulfidation levels. Notably, we observe the excretion of RSSH into the extracellular medium. Further investigations revealed the involvement of the cystine/glutamate antiporter SLC7A11, as cotreatment with its inhibitor, sulfasalazine, significantly reduce extracellular RSSH release. H9c2 cells exhibit tolerance to arylsulfonothioate 1g with an electronwithdrawing 4-cyano group at 1 mM; however, inhibition of the cystine antiporter results in a minor decrease in cell viability. Under oxidative stress conditions induced by DOX or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), cotreatment with 1g diminishes the excretion of RSSH and confers cytoprotection against DOX or H2O2-mediated toxicity. Our findings show adaptive cellular responses to RSSH levels, demonstrating excretion under elevated conditions to maintain redox homeostasis and intracellular retention as a protective response during oxidative stress.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 5, 2026
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The cross-talk among reductive and oxidative species (redox cross-talk), especially those derived from sulfur, nitrogen and oxygen, influence several physiological processes including aging. One major hallmark of aging is cellular senescence, which is associated with chronic systemic inflammation. Here, we report a chemical tool that generates nitoxyl (HNO) upon activation by b-galactosidase, an enzyme that is overexpressed in senescent cells. In a radiation-induced senescence model, the HNO donor suppressed reactive oxygen species (ROS) in a hydrogen sulfide (H2S)-dependent manner. Hence, the newly developed tool provides insights into redox cross-talk and establishes the foundation for new interventions that modulate levels of these species to mitigate oxidative stress and inflammation.more » « less
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Scrubbing sensitive data before releasing memory is a widely accepted but often ignored programming practice for developing secure software. Consequently, confidential data such as cryptographic keys, passwords, and personal data, can remain in memory indefinitely, thereby increasing the risk of exposure to hackers who can retrieve the data using memory dumps or exploit vulnerabilities such as Heartbleed and Etherleak. We propose an approach for detecting a specific memory safety bug called Improper Clearing of Heap Memory Before Release, also known as Common Weakness Enumeration 244, in C programs. The CWE-244 bug in a program allows the leakage of confidential information when a variable is not wiped before heap memory is freed. Our approach combines taint analysis and model checking to detect this weakness. We have three main phases: (1) perform a coarse flow-insensitive inter-procedural static analysis on the program to construct a set of pointer variables that could point to sensitive data; (2) instrument the program with required dynamic variable tracking, and assertion logic for memory wiping before deallocation; and (3) invoke a model checker, the C-Bounded Model Checker (CBMC) in our case, to detect assertion violation in the instrumented program. We develop a tool, \toolname, implementing our instrumentation based algorithm, and we provide experimental validation on the Juliet Test Suite --- the tool is able to detect all the CWE-244 instances present in the test suite. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work which presents a solution to the problem of detecting unscrubbed secure memory deallocation violations in programs.more » « less
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Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) exhibits protective effects in cardiovascular disease such as myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, cardiac hypertrophy, and atherosclerosis. Despite these findings, its mechanism of action remains elusive. Recent studies suggest that H2S can modulate protein activity through redox-based post-translational modifications of protein cysteine residues forming hydropersulfides (RSSH). Furthermore, emerging evidence indicates that reactive sulfur species, including RSSH and polysulfides, exhibit cardioprotective action. However, it is not clear yet whether there are any pharmacological differences in the use of H2S vs. RSSH and/or polysulfides. This study aims to examine the differing cardioprotective effects of distinct reactive sulfur species (RSS) such as H2S, RSSH, and dialkyl trisulfides (RSSSR) compared with canonical ischemic post-conditioning in the context of a Langendorff ex-vivo myocardial I/R injury model. For the first time, a side-by-side study has revealed that exogenous RSSH donation is a superior approach to maintain post-ischemic function and limit infarct size when compared with other RSS and mechanical post-conditioning. Our results also suggest that RSSH preserves mitochondrial respiration in H9c2 cardiomyocytes exposed to hypoxia-reoxygenation via inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation while preserving cell viability.more » « less
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