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Methionine in embryonic development: metabolism, redox homeostasis, epigenetic modification and signaling pathway

Yan Chang, Biyan He, Chenjun Wang, Wanzhen Li, Siming Tao, Jingqing Chen, Yuquan Wang, Ling Yang, Yingjie Wu, Zhenlong Wu, Ning Liu, Yinghe Qin

2025Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Methionine, an essential sulfur-containing amino acid, plays a critical role in methyl metabolism, folate metabolism, polyamine synthesis, redox homeostasis maintenance, epigenetic modification and signaling pathway regulation, particularly during embryonic development. Animal and human studies have increasingly documented that methionine deficiency or excess can negatively impact metabolic processes, translation, epigenetics, and signaling pathways, with ultimate detrimental effects on pregnancy outcomes. However, the underlying mechanisms by which methionine precisely regulates epigenetic modifications and affects signaling pathways remain to be elucidated. In this review, we discuss methionine and the metabolism of its metabolites, the influence of folate-mediated carbon metabolism, redox reactions, DNA and RNA methylation, and histone modifications, as well as the mammalian rapamycin complex and silent information regulator 1-MYC signaling pathway. This review also summarizes our present understanding of the contribution of methionine to these processes, and current nutritional and pharmaceutical strategies for the prevention and treatment of developmental defects in embryos.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsSignal transductionMetabolismHomeostasisCell biologyMethionineEmbryogenesisRedoxBiochemistryChemistryBiologyEmbryoAmino acidGeneOrganic chemistryRNA modifications and cancerFolate and B Vitamins ResearchEpigenetics and DNA Methylation