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1.
Carnitine acyltransferase activities for acetyl- and octanoyl-CoA (coenzyme A) occur in isolated peroxisomal, mitochondrial, and microsomal fractions from rat and pig liver. Solubility studies indicated that both peroxisomal carnitine acyltransferases were in the soluble matrix. In contrast, the microsomal carnitine acyltransferases were tightly associated with their membrane. The microsomal short-chain transferase, carnitine acetyltransferase, was solubilized and stabilized by extensive treatment of the membrane with 0.4 m KCl or 0.3 m sucrose in 0.1 m pyrophosphate at pH 7.5. The same treatment only partially solubilized the microsomal medium-chain transferase, carnitine octanoyltransferase.Although half of the total carnitine acetyltransferase activity in rat liver resides in peroxisomes and microsomes, previous reports have only investigated the mitochondrial activity. Transferase activity for acetyl- and octanoyl-CoA were about equal in peroxisomal and in microsomal fractions. A 200-fold purification of peroxisomal and microsomal carnitine acetyltransferases was achieved using O-(diethylaminoethyl)-cellulose and cellulose phosphate chromatography. This short-chain transferase preparation contained less than 5% as much carnitine octanoyltransferase and acyl-CoA deacylase activities. This fact, plus differences in solubility and stability of the microsomal transferase system for acetyl- and octanoyl-CoA indicate the existence of two separate enzymes: a carnitine acetyltransferase and a carnitine octanoyltransferase in peroxisomes and in microsomes.Peroxisomal and microsomal carnitine acetyltransferases had similar properties and could be the same protein. They showed identical chromatographic behavior and had the same pH activity profiles and major isoelectric points. They also had the same apparent molecular weight by gel filtration (59,000) and the same relative velocities and Km values for several short-chain acyl-CoA substrates. Both were active with propionyl-, acetyl-, malonyl-, and acetyacetyl-CoA, but not with succinyl- and β-hydroxy-β-methylglutaryl-CoA as substrates.  相似文献   

2.
Purification and properties of carnitine acetyltransferase from human liver   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Carnitine acetyltransferase was purified from the supernatant obtained after centrifugation of human liver homogenate to a final specific activity of 78.75 unit.mg-1 with acetyl-CoA as a substrate. Human carnitine acetyltransferase is a monomer of 60.5 kDa with maximum activity in the presence of propionyl-CoA and a pH optimum of 8.7. Apparent Km values for acetyl-CoA are three times lower than for decanoyl-CoA. Km values for L-carnitine in the presence of acetyl-CoA are six times lower than in the presence of decanoyl-CoA. Km values for acetylcarnitine are three times lower than for octanoylcarnitine. The polyclonal antibodies against human carnitine acetyltransferase recognize a 60.5-kDa peptide in the purified preparation of human liver and brain homogenates and in immunoblots of mitochondrial and peroxisomal fractions from human liver. Immunoprecipitation and SDS/PAGE analysis of 35S-labelled proteins produced by human fibroblasts indicate that mitochondrial carnitine acetyltransferase is synthesized as a precursor of 65 kDa. We also purified carnitine acetyltransferase from the pellet obtained after centrifugation of liver homogenate. The pellet was extracted by sonication in the presence of 0.5% Tween 20. The chromatographic procedures for the purification and the kinetic, physical and immunological properties of pellet-extracted carnitine acetyltransferase are similar to those of carnitine acetyltransferase purified from the supernatant of human liver homogenate.  相似文献   

3.
Carnitine dehydrogenase (carnitine:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.108) from Pseudomonas putida IFP 206 catalyzes the oxidation of L-carnitine to 3-dehydrocarnitine. The enzyme was purified 72-fold to homogeneity as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular mass of this enzyme is 62 kDa and consists of two identical subunits. The isoelectric point was found to be 4.7. the carnitine dehydrogenase is specific for L-carnitine and NAD+. The optimum pH for enzymatic activity in the oxidation reaction was found to be 9.0 and 7.0 in the reduction reaction. The optimal temperature is 30 degrees C. The Km values for substrates were determined.  相似文献   

4.
Peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase was purified by solubilization using Tween 20 and KCl from the large granule fraction of the liver of clofibrate-treated chick embryo, DEAE-Sephacel and blue Sepharose CL-6B column chromatography. The peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase was an Mr 64,000 polypeptide; the mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase had a subunit molecular weight of 69,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The carnitine acetyltransferase was an Mr 64,000 polypeptide. Antibody against purified peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase reacted only with peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase, but not with mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase or carnitine acetyltransferase. In addition, anti-peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase reacted only with the protein in peroxisomes purified from chick embryo liver by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Thus, it was confirmed that purified peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase was a peroxisomal protein. Compared with mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase, peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase was extremely resistant to inactivation by trypsin. The pH optimum of peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase was 8.5, differing from that of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase. The Km value of peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase for palmitoyl-CoA (32 microM) was similar to that of the mitochondrial one, whereas those values for L-carnitine (140 microM), palmitoyl-L-carnitine (43 microM) and CoA (9 microM) were lower than those of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase. Peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase exhibited similar substrate specificities in both the forward and reverse reactions, with the highest activity toward lauroyl derivatives. Furthermore, this enzyme showed relatively high affinities for long-chain acyl derivatives (C10-C16) and similar Km values (30-50 microM) for acyl-CoAs, acylcarnitine and CoA, and a constant Km value (approximately 150 microM) for carnitine. These results indicate that peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase played a role in the modulation of the intracellular CoA/long-chain acyl-CoA ratio at the hatching stage of chicken when long-chain fatty acids are actively oxidized in peroxisomes.  相似文献   

5.
Carnitine acetyltransferase was isolated from yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae with an apparent molecular weight of 400,000. The enzyme contains identical subunits of 65,000 Da. The Km values of the isolated enzyme for acetyl-CoA and for carnitine were 17.7 microM and 180 microM, respectively. Carnitine acetyltransferase is an inducible enzyme, a 15-fold increase in the enzyme activity was found when the cells were grown on glycerol instead of glucose. Carnitine acetyltransferase, similarly to citrate synthase, has a double localization (approx. 80% of the enzyme is mitochondrial), while acetyl-CoA synthetase was found only in the cytosol. In the mitochondria carnitine acetyltransferase is located in the matrix space. The incorporation of 14C into CO2 and in lipids showed a similar ratio, 2.9 and 2.6, when the substrate was [1-14C]acetate and [1-14C]acetylcarnitine, respectively. Based on these results carnitine acetyltransferase can be considered as an enzyme necessary for acetate metabolism by transporting the activated acetyl group from the cytosol into the mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of purified beef heart mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase have been extensively investigated with a semiautomated system and the computer program TANKIN and shown to be sigmoidal with both acyl-CoA and L-carnitine. In contrast, Michaelis-Menten kinetics were found with carnitine octanoyltransferase. The catalytic activity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase is strongly pH dependent. The K0.5 and Vmax are both greater at lower pH. The K0.5 for palmitoyl-CoA is 1.9 and 24.2 microM at pH 8 and 6, respectively. The K0.5 for L-carnitine is 0.2 and 2.9 mM at pH 8 and 6, respectively. Malonyl-CoA (20-600 microM) had no effect on the kinetic parameters for palmitoyl-CoA at both saturating and subsaturating levels of L-carnitine. We conclude that malonyl-CoA is not a competitive inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase. The purified enzyme contained 18.9 mol of bound phospholipid/mol of enzyme which were identified as cardiolipin, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylcholine by thin-layer chromatography. The data are consistent with the conclusion that native carnitine palmitoyltransferase exhibits different catalytic properties on either side of the inner membrane of mitochondria due to its non-Michaelis-Menten kinetic behavior, which can be affected by pH differences and differences in membrane environment.  相似文献   

7.
To investigate the physical and kinetic properties of sperm carnitine acetyltransferase, the enzyme was purified from bovine spermatozoa and heart muscle. Carnitine acetyltransferase was purified 580-fold from ejaculated bovine spermatozoa to a specific activity of 85 units/mg protein (95% homogeneity). Sperm carnitine acetyltransferase was characterized as a single polypeptide of Mr 62,000 and pI 8.2. Heart carnitine acetyltransferase was purified 650-fold by the same procedure to a final specific activity of 71 units/mg protein. The kinetic properties of purified bovine sperm carnitine acetyltransferase were consistent with the proposed function of this enzyme in acetylcarnitine pool formation. Product inhibition by either acetyl-l-carnitine or CoASH was not sufficient to predict significant in vivo inhibition of acetyl transfer. At high concentrations of l-carnitine, bovine sperm and heart carnitine acetyltransferases were most active with propionyl- and butyryl-CoA substrates, although octanoyl-, iso-butyryl-, and iso-valeryl-CoA were acceptable substrates. Binding of one substrate was enhanced by the presence of the second substrate. Carnitine analogs that have significance in reproduction, such as phosphorylcholine and taurine, did not inhibit carnitine acetyltransferase. Bovine sperm and heart carnitine acetyltransferases were indistinguishable on the basis of purification behavior, pI, pH optima, kinetic properties, acyl-CoA specificity, and sensitivity to sulfhydryl reagents and divalent cations; thus there was no indication that bovine sperm carnitine acetyltransferase is a sperm-specific isozyme.  相似文献   

8.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase and carnitine octanoyltransferase activities in brain mitochondrial fractions were approx. 3-4-fold lower than activities in liver. Estimated Km values of CPT1 and CPT2 (the overt and latent forms respectively of carnitine palmitoyltransferase) for L-carnitine were 80 microM and 326 microM, respectively, and K0.5 values for palmitoyl-CoA were 18.5 microM and 12 microM respectively. CPT1 activity was strongly inhibited by malonyl-CoA, with I50 values (concn. giving 50% of maximum inhibition) of approx. 1.5 microM. In the absence of other ligands, [2-14C]malonyl-CoA bound to intact brain mitochondria in a manner consistent with the presence of two independent classes of binding sites. Estimated values for KD(1), KD(2), N1 and N2 were 18 nM, 27 microM, 1.3 pmol/mg of protein and 168 pmol/mg of protein respectively. Neither CPT1 activity, nor its sensitivity towards malonyl-CoA, was affected by 72 h starvation. Rates of oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA (in the presence of L-carnitine) or of palmitoylcarnitine by non-synaptic mitochondria were extremely low, indicating that neither CPT1 nor CPT2 was likely to be rate-limiting for beta-oxidation in brain. CPT1 activity relative to mitochondrial protein increased slightly from birth to weaning (20 days) and thereafter decreased by approx. 50%.  相似文献   

9.
1. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase and carnitine octanoyltransferase activities were measured in mitochondria at various acyl-CoA concentrations before and after sonication, thus permitting assessment of both overt and latent activities. 2. Overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase in liver and adipocyte mitochondria and overt carnitine octanoyltransferase in liver mitochondria were inhibited by malonyl-CoA. None of the latent activities were affected by this metabolite. 3. 5,5'-Dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) stimulated latent hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase at low [palmitoyl-CoA]. 4. Starvation (24 h) decreased overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity in adipocyte mitochondria, but did not alter the sensitivity of this activity to malonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

10.
Heart and liver mitochondrial, as well as liver peroxisomal, carnitine acetyltransferase was purified to apparent homogeneity and some properties, primarily of heart mitochondrial carnitine acetyltransferase, were determined. Hill coefficients for propionyl-CoA are 1.0 for each of the enzymes. The molecular weight of heart mitochondrial carnitine acetyltransferase, determined by SDS-PAGE, is 62,000. It is monomeric in the presence of catalytic amounts of substrate. Polyclonal antibodies against purified rat liver peroxisomal carnitine acetyltransferase precipitate liver and heart mitochondrial and liver peroxisomal carnitine acetyltransferase, but not liver peroxisomal carnitine octanoyltransferase. Liver peroxisomes, mitochondria, and microsomes and heart mitochondria all give multiple bands on Western blotting with the antibody against carnitine acetyltransferase. Major protein bands occur at the molecular weight of carnitine acetyltransferase and at 33 to 35 kDa.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of malonyl-CoA on the kinetic parameters of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) the outer form of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (palmitoyl-CoA: L-carnitine O-palmitoyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.21) from rat heart mitochondria was investigated using a kinetic analyzer in the absence of bovine serum albumin with non-swelling conditions and decanoyl-CoA as the cosubstrate. The K0.5 for decanoyl-CoA is 3 microM for heart mitochondria from both fed and fasted rats. Membrane-bound carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) shows substrate cooperativity for both carnitine and acyl-CoA, similar to that exhibited by the enzyme purified from bovine heart mitochondria. The Hill coefficient for decanoyl-CoA varied from 1.5 to 2.0, depending on the method of assay and the preparation of mitochondria. Malonyl-CoA increased the K0.5 for decanoyl-CoA with no apparent increase in sigmoidicity or Vmax. With 20 microM malonyl-CoA and a Hill coefficient of n = 2.1, the K0.5 for decanoyl-CoA increased to 185 microM. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) from fed rats had an apparent Ki for malonyl-CoA of 0.3 microM, while that from 48-h-fasted rats was 2.5 microM. The kinetics with L-carnitine were variable: for different preparations of mitochondria, the K0.5 ranged from 0.2 to 0.7 mM and the Hill coefficient varied from 1.2 to 1.8. When an isotope forward assay was used to determine the effect of malonyl-CoA on carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) activity of heart mitochondria from fed and fasted animals, the difference was much less than that obtained using a continuous rate assay. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) was less sensitive to malonyl-CoA at low compared to high carnitine concentrations, particularly with mitochondria from fasted animals. The data show that carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) exhibits substrate cooperativity for both acyl-CoA and L-carnitine in its native state. The data show that membrane-bound carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) like carnitine palmitoyltransferase purified from heart mitochondria exhibits substrate cooperativity indicative of allosteric enzymes and indicate that malonyl-CoA acts like a negative allosteric modifier by shifting the acyl-CoA saturation to the right. A slow form of membrane-bound carnitine palmitoyltransferase (outer) was not detected, and thus, like purified carnitine palmitoyltransferase, substrate-induced hysteretic behavior is not the cause of the positive substrate cooperativity.  相似文献   

12.
Carnitine octanoyltransferase (COT) in 500g supernatant fluids from mouse liver has a specific activity at least twice that of carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT) or carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT). When mice are fed diets containing the lipid-lowering drugs, clofibrate or nafenopin, the specific activity of COT increases 4- and 11-fold, respectively. Liver homogenates from mice fed a control diet, and diets containing clofibrate, nafenopin, or Wy-14,643 were fractionated by sucrose gradient centrifugation, and the subcellular distribution of carnitine acyltransferases was determined. In the controls, peroxisomes contained about 70% of the total COT. The specific activity of COT in the peroxisomal peak was 12-fold greater than either CAT or CPT, and 20-fold greater than the COT activity in the mitochondrial fraction. Treatment with hypolipidemic drugs increased the specific activity of peroxisomal COT 2- to 3-fold and CAT 6- to 12-fold, while mitochondrial COT increased 5- to 11-fold and CAT 19- to 54-fold. COT was purified to homogeneity from livers of mice treated with Wy-14,643. It had an apparent Mr of 60,000 by Sephadex G-100 and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and a maximum activity for octanoyl-CoA with acetyl-CoA and palmitoyl-CoA having activities of 2 and 10%, respectively, when 100 microM acyl-CoA substrates were used. The Km's for 1-carnitine, octanoyl-CoA, palmitoyl-CoA, and acetyl-CoA were 130, 15, 69, and 155 microM, respectively, in the forward direction; and in the reverse direction were 110, 100, 104, and 783 microM for CoASH, octanoylcarnitine, palmitoylcarnitine, and acetylcarnitine, respectively. With Vmax conditions, acetyl-CoA and palmitoyl-CoA had activities of 8 and 26% of the activity for octanoyl-CoA, and acetylcarnitine and palmitoylcarnitine had activities of 7 and 22%, respectively, of the activity for octanoylcarnitine. It is concluded that COT is a separate enzyme present in large amounts in the matrix of mouse liver peroxisomes, with kinetic properties that greatly favor medium-chain acylcarnitine formation.  相似文献   

13.
The data presented herein show that both rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum contain a medium-chain/long-chain carnitine acyltransferase, designated as COT, that is strongly inhibited by malonyl-CoA. The average percentage inhibition by 17 microM malonyl-CoA for 25 preparations is 87.4 +/- 11.7, with nine preparations showing 100% inhibition; the concentrations of decanoyl-CoA and L-carnitine were 17 microM and 1.7 mM, respectively. The concentration of malonyl-CoA required for 50% inhibition is 5.3 microM. The microsomal medium-chain/long-chain carnitine acyltransferase is also strongly inhibited by etomoxiryl-CoA, with 0.6 microM etomoxiryl-CoA producing 50% inhibition. Although palmitoyl-CoA is a substrate at low concentrations, the enzyme is strongly inhibited by high concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA; 50% inhibition is produced by 11 microM palmitoyl-CoA. The microsomal medium-chain/long-chain carnitine acyltransferase is stable to freezing at -70 degrees C, but it is labile in Triton X-100 and octylglucoside. The inhibition by palmitoyl-CoA and the approximate 200-fold higher I50 for etomoxiryl-CoA clearly distinguish this enzyme from the outer form of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase. The microsomal medium-chain/long-chain carnitine acyltransferase is not inhibited by antibody prepared against mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase, and it is only slightly inhibited by antibody prepared against peroxisomal carnitine octanoyltransferase. When purified peroxisomal enzyme is mixed with equal amounts of microsomal activity and the mixture is incubated with the antibody prepared against the peroxisomal enzyme, the amount of carnitine octanoyltransferase precipitated is equal to all of the peroxisomal carnitine octanoyltransferase plus a small amount of the microsomal activity. This demonstrates that the microsomal enzyme is antigenically different than either of the other liver carnitine acyltransferases that show medium-chain/long-chain transferase activity. These results indicate that medium-chain and long-chain acyl-CoA conversion to acylcarnitines by microsomes in the cytosolic compartment is also modulated by malonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

14.
The steady state levels of mitochondrial acyl-CoAs produced during the oxidation of pyruvate, alpha-ketoisovalerate, alpha-ketoisocaproate, and octanoate during state 3 and state 4 respiration by rat heart and liver mitochondria were determined. Addition of carnitine lowered the amounts of individual short-chain acyl-CoAs and increased CoASH in a manner that was both tissue- and substrate-dependent. The largest effects were on acetyl-CoA derived from pyruvate in heart mitochondria using either state 3 or state 4 oxidative conditions. Carnitine greatly reduced the amounts of propionyl-CoA derived from alpha-ketoisovalerate, while smaller effects were obtained on the branched-chain acyl-CoA levels, consistent with the latter acyl moieties being poorer substrates for carnitine acetyltransferase and also poorer substrates for the carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase. The levels of acetyl-CoA in heart and liver mitochondria oxidizing octanoate during state 3 respiration were lower than those obtained with pyruvate. The rate of acetylcarnitine efflux from heart mitochondria during state 3 (with pyruvate or octanoate as substrate, in the presence or absence of malate with 0.2 mM carnitine) shows a linear response to the acetyl-CoA/CoASH ratio generated in the absence of carnitine. This relationship is different for liver mitochondria. These data demonstrate that carnitine can modulate the aliphatic short-chain acyl-CoA/CoA ratio in heart and liver mitochondria and indicate that the degree of modulation varies with the aliphatic acyl moiety.  相似文献   

15.
Carnitine acyltransferases catalyze the exchange of acyl groups between carnitine and CoA. The members of the family can be classified on the basis of their acyl-CoA selectivity. Carnitine acetyltransferases (CrATs) are very active toward short-chain acyl-CoAs but not toward medium- or long-chain acyl-CoAs. Previously, we identified an amino acid residue (Met(564) in rat CrAT) that was critical to fatty acyl-chain-length specificity. M564G-mutated CrAT behaved as if its natural substrates were medium-chain acyl-CoAs, similar to that of carnitine octanoyltransferase (COT). To extend the specificity of rat CrAT to other substrates, we have performed new mutations. Using in silico molecular modeling procedures, we have now identified a second putative amino acid involved in acyl-CoA specificity (Asp(356) in rat CrAT). The double CrAT mutant D356A/M564G showed 6-fold higher activity toward palmitoyl-CoA than that of the single CrAT mutant M564G and a new activity toward stearoyl-CoA. We show that by performing two amino acid replacements a CrAT can be converted into a pseudo carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) in terms of substrate specificity. To change CrAT specificity from carnitine to choline, we also prepared a mutant CrAT that incorporates four amino acid substitutions (A106M/T465V/T467N/R518N). The quadruple mutant shifted the catalytic discrimination between l-carnitine and choline in favor of the latter substrate and showed a 9-fold increase in catalytic efficiency toward choline compared with that of the wild-type. Molecular in silico docking supports kinetic data for the positioning of substrates in the catalytic site of CrAT mutants.  相似文献   

16.
Carnitine acetyltransferase activity had been previously shown to occur in peroxisomes, mitochondria, and a membranous fraction of rat and pig hepatocytes. When components of this third subcellular fraction (plasma membranes, components of the Golgi apparatus, and microsomes) were further separated, carnitine acetyltransferase fractionated with the microsomes. Microsomes isolated by three different methods (isopycnic sucrose density zonal centrifugation, high-speed differential centrifugation, and aggregation with Ca2+ followed by low-speed differential centrifugation) all contained carnitine acetyltransferase activity. The lability of carnitine acetyltransferase in microsomes isolated by different methods and in different isolation media is reported.When total microsomes were subfractionated into rough and smooth components, carnitine acetyltransferase activity was found to the same extent in both and was tightly associated with the microsomal membrane. The microsomal enzyme was rapidly inactivated in 0.25 m sucrose or 0.1 m phosphate, but was stable for at least 2 weeks in 0.4 m KCl. Extensive treatment with high ionic strength salt solutions, 1% Triton X-100, or a combination of the two was used to solubilize microsomal carnitine acetyltransferase activity.Carnitine octanoyltransferase activity was also found in the microsomal fractions isolated by three different methods, but no carnitine palmitoyltransferase was detected in the microsomal fractions. It is proposed that microsomal carnitine acetyl- and octanoyltransferases could be involved in the transfer of acyl groups across the microsomal membrane, thereby providing a source of acetyl and other acyl CoA's at sites of acetylation reactions and synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Carnitine acyltransferases have crucial functions in fatty acid metabolism. Members of this enzyme family show distinctive substrate preferences for short-, medium- or long-chain fatty acids. The molecular mechanism for this substrate selectivity is not clear as so far only the structure of carnitine acetyltransferase has been determined. To further our understanding of these important enzymes, we report here the crystal structures at up to 2.0-A resolution of mouse carnitine octanoyltransferase alone and in complex with the substrate octanoylcarnitine. The structures reveal significant differences in the acyl group binding pocket between carnitine octanoyltransferase and carnitine acetyltransferase. Amino acid substitutions and structural changes produce a larger hydrophobic pocket that binds the octanoyl group in an extended conformation. Mutation of a single residue (Gly-553) in this pocket can change the substrate preference between short- and medium-chain acyl groups. The side chains of Cys-323 and Met-335 at the bottom of this pocket assume dual conformations in the substrate complex, and mutagenesis studies suggest that the Met-335 residue is important for catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
Uptake and metabolism of L-carnitine, D-carnitine and acetyl-L-carnitine were studied utilizing isolated guinea-pig enterocytes. Uptake of the D- and L-isomers of carnitine was temperature dependent. Uptake of L-[14C]carnitine by jejunal cells was sodium dependent since replacement by lithium, potassium or choline greatly reduced uptake. L- and D-carnitine developed intracellular to extracellular concentration gradients for total carnitine (free plus acetylated) of 2.7 and 1.4, respectively. However, acetylation of L-carnitine accounted almost entirely for the difference between uptake of L- and D-carnitine. About 60% of the intracellular label was acetyl-L-carnitine after 30 min, and the remainder was free L-carnitine. No other products were observed. D-Carnitine was not metabolized. Acetyl-L-carnitine was deacetylated during or immediately after uptake into intestinal cells and a portion of this newly formed intracellular free carnitine was apparently reacetylated. L-Carnitine and D-carnitine transport (after adjustment for metabolism and diffusion) were evaluated over a concentration range of 2-1000 microM. Km values of 6-7 microM and 5 microM, were estimated for L- and D-carnitine, respectively. Ileal-cell uptake was about half that found for jejunal cells, but the labeled intracellular acetylcarnitine-to-carnitine ratios were similar for both cell populations. Carnitine transport by guinea-pig enterocytes demonstrate characteristics of a carrier-mediated process since it was inhibited by D-carnitine and trimethylaminobutyrate, as well as being temperature and concentration dependent. The process appears to be facilitated diffusion rather than active transport since L-carnitine did not develop a significant concentration gradient, and was unaffected by ouabain or actinomycin A.  相似文献   

19.
Carnitine acyltransferases catalyze the reversible conversion of acyl-CoAs into acylcarnitine esters. This family includes the mitochondrial enzymes carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2) and carnitine acetyltransferase (CrAT). CPT2 is part of the carnitine shuttle that is necessary to import fatty acids into mitochondria and catalyzes the conversion of acylcarnitines into acyl-CoAs. In addition, when mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation is impaired, CPT2 is able to catalyze the reverse reaction and converts accumulating long- and medium-chain acyl-CoAs into acylcarnitines for export from the matrix to the cytosol. However, CPT2 is inactive with short-chain acyl-CoAs and intermediates of the branched-chain amino acid oxidation pathway (BCAAO). In order to explore the origin of short-chain and branched-chain acylcarnitines that may accumulate in various organic acidemias, we performed substrate specificity studies using purified recombinant human CrAT. Various saturated, unsaturated and branched-chain acyl-CoA esters were tested and the synthesized acylcarnitines were quantified by ESI-MS/MS. We show that CrAT converts short- and medium-chain acyl-CoAs (C2 to C10-CoA), whereas no activity was observed with long-chain species. Trans-2-enoyl-CoA intermediates were found to be poor substrates for this enzyme. Furthermore, CrAT turned out to be active towards some but not all the BCAAO intermediates tested and no activity was found with dicarboxylic acyl-CoA esters. This suggests the existence of another enzyme able to handle the acyl-CoAs that are not substrates for CrAT and CPT2, but for which the corresponding acylcarnitines are well recognized as diagnostic markers in inborn errors of metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Carnitine plays an essential role in mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation as a part of a cycle that transfers long-chain fatty acids across the mitochondrial membrane and involves two carnitine palmitoyltransferases (CPT1 and CPT2). Two distinct carnitine acyltransferases, carnitine octanoyltransferase (COT) and carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT), are peroxisomal enzymes, which indicates that carnitine is not only important for mitochondrial, but also for peroxisomal metabolism. It has been demonstrated that after peroxisomal metabolism, specific intermediates can be exported as acylcarnitines for subsequent and final mitochondrial metabolism. There is also evidence that peroxisomes are able to degrade fatty acids that are typically handled by mitochondria possibly after transport as acylcarnitines. Here we review the biochemistry and physiological functions of metabolite exchange between peroxisomes and mitochondria with a special focus on acylcarnitines.  相似文献   

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