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1.
Carnitine acyltransferases catalyze the exchange of acyl groups between coenzyme A (CoA) and carnitine. They have important roles in many cellular processes, especially the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids, and are attractive targets for drug discovery against diabetes and obesity. These enzymes are classified based on their substrate selectivity for short-chain, medium-chain, or long-chain fatty acids. Structural information on carnitine acetyltransferase suggests that residues Met-564 and Phe-565 may be important determinants of substrate selectivity with the side chain of Met-564 located in the putative binding pocket for acyl groups. Both residues are replaced by glycine in carnitine palmitoyltransferases. To assess the functional relevance of this structural observation, we have replaced these two residues with small amino acids by mutagenesis, characterized the substrate preference of the mutants, and determined the crystal structures of two of these mutants. Kinetic studies confirm that the M564G or M564A mutation is sufficient to increase the activity of the enzyme toward medium-chain substrates with hexanoyl-CoA being the preferred substrate for the M564G mutant. The crystal structures of the M564G mutant, both alone and in complex with carnitine, reveal a deep binding pocket that can accommodate the larger acyl group. We have determined the crystal structure of the F565A mutant in a ternary complex with both the carnitine and CoA substrates at a 1.8-A resolution. The F565A mutation has minor effects on the structure or the substrate preference of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the physical, kinetic, and immunological properties of carnitine acyltransferases purified from mouse liver peroxisomes. Peroxisomal carnitine octanoyltransferase and carnitine acetyltransferase were purified to apparent homogeneity from livers of mice fed a diet containing the hypolipidemic drug Wy-14,643 [( 4-chloro-6-(2,3-xylidino)-2-pyrimidinylthio]-acetic acid). Both enzymes have a molecular weight of 60,000 and a similar pH optimum. Carnitine octanoyltransferase had a maximum activity for C6 moieties while the maximum for carnitine acetyltransferase was with C3 and C4 moieties. The apparent Km values were between 2 and 20 microM for the preferred acyl-CoA substrates, and the Km values for L-carnitine varied depending on the acyl-CoA cosubstrates used. The Hill coefficient, n, was approximately 1 for all acyl-CoAs tested, indicating Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Carnitine octanoyltransferase retained its maximum activity when preincubated with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate) at pH 7.0 or 8.5. Neither carnitine octanoyltransferase nor carnitine acetyltransferase were inhibited by malonyl-CoA. The immunology of carnitine octanoyltransferase is discussed. These data indicate that peroxisomal carnitine octanoyltransferase and carnitine acetyltransferase function in vivo in the direction of acylcarnitine formation, and suggest that the concentration of L-carnitine could influence the specificity for different acyl-CoA substrates.  相似文献   

3.
To study the putative role of human carnitine octanoyltransferase (COT) in the beta-oxidation of branched-chain fatty acids, we identified and cloned the cDNA encoding human COT and expressed it in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Enzyme activity measurements showed that COT efficiently converts one of the end products of the peroxisomal beta-oxidation of pristanic acid, 4, 8-dimethylnonanoyl-CoA, to its corresponding carnitine ester. Production of the carnitine ester of this branched/medium-chain acyl-CoA within the peroxisome is required for its transport to the mitochondrion where further beta-oxidation occurs. In contrast, 4, 8-dimethylnonanoyl-CoA is not a substrate for carnitine acetyltransferase, another acyltransferase localized in peroxisomes, which catalyzes the formation of carnitine esters of the other products of pristanic acid beta-oxidation, namely acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA. Our results shed new light on the function of COT in fatty acid metabolism and point to a crucial role of COT in the beta-oxidation of branched-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Jogl G  Tong L 《Cell》2003,112(1):113-122
Carnitine acyltransferases have crucial roles in the transport of fatty acids for beta-oxidation. Dysregulation of these enzymes can lead to serious diseases in humans, and they are targets for therapeutic development against diabetes. We report the crystal structures of murine carnitine acetyltransferase (CRAT), alone and in complex with its substrate carnitine or CoA. The structure contains two domains. Surprisingly, these two domains share the same backbone fold, which is also similar to that of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase and dihydrolipoyl transacetylase. The active site is located at the interface between the two domains. Carnitine and CoA are bound in deep channels in the enzyme, on opposite sides of the catalytic His343 residue. The structural information provides a molecular basis for understanding the catalysis by carnitine acyltransferases and for designing their inhibitors. Specifically, our structural information suggests that the substrate carnitine may assist the catalysis by stabilizing the oxyanion in the reaction intermediate.  相似文献   

7.
The location of carnitine acetyltransferase and carnitine octanoyltransferase on the inner and outer surfaces of rat liver microsomes was investigated. Latency of mannose-6-phosphate phosphatase showed that the microsomes were 90–94% sealed. All of the octanoyltransferase is associated with the cytosolic face, while the acetyltransferase is distributed between the cytosolic face (68–73%) and the lumen face (27–32%) of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. Small amounts of trypsin inhibit the carnitine octanoyltransferase equally in either sealed or permeable microsomes but the acetyltransferase of sealed microsomes is stimulated. Large amounts of trypsin inhibit all transferase activities by about 60%, except for acetyltransferase of sealed microsomes. Other studies show that 0.1% Triton X-100 partially inhibits carnitine octanoyltransferase of microsomes but does not inhibit the acetyltransferase or any of the mitochondrial carnitine acyltransferase.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (CPT-II) has a crucial role in the beta-oxidation of long-chain fatty acids in mitochondria. We report here the crystal structure of rat CPT-II at 1.9A resolution. The overall structure shares strong similarity to those of short- and medium-chain carnitine acyltransferases, although detailed structural differences in the active site region have a significant impact on the substrate selectivity of CPT-II. Three aliphatic chains, possibly from a detergent that is used for the crystallization, were found in the structure. Two of them are located in the carnitine and CoA binding sites, respectively. The third aliphatic chain may mimic the long-chain acyl group in the substrate of CPT-II. The binding site for this aliphatic chain does not exist in the short- and medium-chain carnitine acyltransferases, due to conformational differences among the enzymes. A unique insert in CPT-II is positioned on the surface of the enzyme, with a highly hydrophobic surface. It is likely that this surface patch mediates the association of CPT-II with the inner membrane of the mitochondria.  相似文献   

11.
Carnitine acyltransferases are a family of ubiquitous enzymes that play a pivotal role in cellular energy metabolism. We report here the x-ray structure of human carnitine acetyltransferase to a 1.6-A resolution. This structure reveals a monomeric protein of two equally sized alpha/beta domains. Each domain is shown to have a partially similar fold to other known but oligomeric enzymes that are also involved in group-transfer reactions. The unique monomeric arrangement of the two domains constitutes a central narrow active site tunnel, indicating a likely universal feature for all members of the carnitine acyltransferase family. Superimposition of the substrate complex of a related protein, dihydrolipoyl trans-acetylase, reveals that both substrates localize to the active site tunnel of human carnitine acetyltransferase, suggesting the location of the ligand binding sites for carnitine and coenzyme A. Most significantly, this structure provides critical insights into the molecular basis for fatty acyl chain transfer and a possible common mechanism among a wide range of acyltransferases utilizing a catalytic dyad.  相似文献   

12.
The substrate specificity of carnitine acetyltransferase   总被引:13,自引:12,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. A study of the acyl group specificity of the carnitine acetyltransferase reaction [acyl-(-)carnitine+CoASH right harpoon over left harpoon (-)-carnitine+acyl-CoA] has been made with the enzyme from pigeon breast muscle. Acyl groups containing up to 10 carbon atoms are transferred and detailed kinetic investigations with a range of acyl-CoA and acylcarnitine substrates are reported. 2. Acyl-CoA derivatives with 12 or more carbon atoms in the acyl group are potent reversible inhibitors of carnitine acetyltransferase, competing with acetyl-CoA. Lauroyl- and myristoyl-CoA show a mixed inhibition with respect to (-)-carnitine, but palmitoyl-CoA competes strictly with this substrate also. Palmitoyl-dl-carnitine shows none of these effects. 3. Ammonium palmitate inhibits the enzyme competitively with respect to (-)-carnitine and non-competitively with respect to acetyl-CoA. 4. It is suggested that a hydrophobic site exists on the carnitine acetyltransferase molecule. The hydrocarbon chain of an acyl-CoA derivative containing eight or more carbon atoms in the acyl group may interact with this, which results in enhanced acyl-CoA binding. Competition occurs between ligands bound to this hydrophobic site and the carnitine binding site. 5. The possible physiological significance of long-chain acyl-CoA inhibition of this enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We report the crystal structure of a binary complex of human peroxisomal carnitine acetyltransferase and the substrate l-carnitine, refined to a resolution of 1.8 Angstrom with an R(factor) value of 18.9% (R(free)=22.3%). L-carnitine binds to a preformed pocket in the active site tunnel of carnitine acetyltransferase aligned with His(322). The quaternary nitrogen of carnitine forms a pi-cation interaction with Phe(545), while Arg(497) forms an electrostatic interaction with the negatively charged carboxylate group. An extensive hydrogen bond network also occurs between the carboxylate group and Tyr(431), Thr(444), and a bound water molecule. Site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic characterization reveals that Tyr(431), Thr(444), Arg(497), and Phe(545) are essential for high affinity binding of L-carnitine.  相似文献   

14.
Fatty acid activation, transfer, and reduction by the fatty acid reductase multienzyme complex from Photobacterium phosphoreum to generate fatty aldehydes for the luminescence reaction is regulated by the interaction of the synthetase and reductase subunits of this complex. Identification of the specific site involved in covalent transfer of the fatty acyl group between the sites of activation and reduction on the synthetase and reductase subunits, respectively, is a critical step in understanding how subunit interactions modulate the flow of fatty acyl groups through the fatty acid reductase complex. To accomplish this goal, the nucleotide sequence of the luxE gene coding for the acyl-protein synthetase subunit (373 amino acid residues) was determined and the conserved cysteinyl residues implicated in fatty acyl transfer identified. Using site-specific mutagenesis, each of the five conserved cysteine residues was converted to a serine residue, the mutated synthetases expressed in Escherichia coli, and the properties of the mutant proteins examined. On complementation of four of the mutants with the reductase subunit, the synthetase subunit was acylated and the acyl group could be reversibly transferred between the reductase and synthetase subunits, and fatty acid reductase activity was fully regenerated. As well, sensitivity of the acylated synthetases to hydroxylamine cleavage (under denaturation conditions to remove any conformational effects on reactivity) was retained, showing that a cysteine and not a serine residue was still acylated. However, substitution of a cysteine residue only ten amino acid residues from the carboxyl terminal (C364S) prevented acylation of the synthetase and regeneration of fatty acid reductase activity. Moreover, this mutant protein preserved its ability to activate fatty acid to fatty acyl-AMP but could not accept the acyl group from the reductase subunit, demonstrating that the C364S synthetase had retained its conformation and specifically lost the fatty acylation site. These results provide evidence that the flow of fatty acyl groups in the fatty acid reductase complex is modulated by interaction of the reductase subunit with a cysteine residue very close to the carboxyl terminal of the synthetase, which in turn acts as a flexible arm to transfer acyl groups between the sites of activation and reduction.  相似文献   

15.
We report the crystal structure of a binary complex of human peroxisomal carnitine acetyltransferase and the substrate l-carnitine, refined to a resolution of 1.8 Angstrom with an R(factor) value of 18.9% (R(free)=22.3%). L-carnitine binds to a preformed pocket in the active site tunnel of carnitine acetyltransferase aligned with His(322). The quaternary nitrogen of carnitine forms a pi-cation interaction with Phe(545), while Arg(497) forms an electrostatic interaction with the negatively charged carboxylate group. An extensive hydrogen bond network also occurs between the carboxylate group and Tyr(431), Thr(444), and a bound water molecule. Site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic characterization reveals that Tyr(431), Thr(444), Arg(497), and Phe(545) are essential for high affinity binding of L-carnitine.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Christensen QH  Cronan JE 《Biochemistry》2010,49(46):10024-10036
Bacillus subtilis lacks a recognizable homologue of the LipB octanoyltransferase, an enzyme essential for lipoic acid synthesis in Escherichia coli. LipB transfers the octanoyl moiety from octanoyl-acyl carrier protein to the lipoyl domains of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases via a thioester-linked octanoyl-LipB intermediate. The octanoylated dehydrogenase is then converted to the enzymatically active lipoylated species by insertion of two sulfur atoms into the octanoyl moiety by the S-adenosyl-l-methionine radical enzyme, LipA (lipoate synthase). B. subtilis synthesizes lipoic acid and contains a LipA homologue that is fully functional in E. coli. Therefore, the lack of a LipB homologue presented the puzzle of how B. subtilis synthesizes the LipA substrate. We report that B. subtilis encodes an octanoyltransferase that has virtually no sequence resemblance to E. coli LipB but instead has a sequence that resembles that of the E. coli lipoate ligase, LplA. On the basis of this resemblance, these genes have generally been annotated as encoding a lipoate ligase, an enzyme that in E. coli scavenges lipoic acid from the environment but plays no role in de novo synthesis. We have named the B. subtilis octanoyltransferase LipM and find that, like LipB, the LipM reaction proceeds through a thioester-linked acyl enzyme intermediate. The LipM active site nucleophile was identified as C150 by the finding that this thiol becomes modified when LipM is expressed in E. coli. The level of the octanoyl-LipM intermediate can be significantly decreased by blocking fatty acid synthesis during LipM expression, and C150 was confirmed as an essential active site residue by site-directed mutagenesis. LipM homologues seem the sole type of octanoyltransferase present in the firmicutes and are also present in the cyanobacteria. LipM type octanoyltransferases represent a new clade of the PF03099 protein family, suggesting that octanoyl transfer activity has evolved at least twice within this superfamily.  相似文献   

18.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is an essential co-factor protein in fatty acid biosynthesis that shuttles covalently bound fatty acyl intermediates in its hydrophobic pocket to various enzyme partners. To characterize acyl chain-ACP interactions and their influence on enzyme interactions, we performed 19 molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of Escherichia coli apo-, holo-, and acyl-ACPs. The simulations were started with the acyl chain in either a solvent-exposed or a buried conformation. All four short-chain (< or = C10) and one long-chain (C16) unbiased acyl-ACP MD simulation show the transition of the solvent-exposed acyl chain into the hydrophobic pocket of ACP, revealing its pathway of acyl chain binding. Although the acyl chain resides inside the pocket, Thr-39 and Glu-60 at the entrance stabilize the phosphopantetheine linker through hydrogen bonding. Comparisons of the different ACP forms indicate that the loop region between helices II and III and the prosthetic linker may aid in substrate recognition by enzymes of fatty acid synthase systems. The MD simulations consistently show that the hydrophobic binding pocket of ACP is best suited to accommodate an octanoyl group and is capable of adjusting in size to accommodate chain lengths as long as decanoic acid. The simulations also reveal a second, novel binding mode of the acyl chains inside the hydrophobic binding pocket directed toward helix I. This study provides a detailed dynamic picture of acyl-ACPs that is in excellent agreement with available experimental data and, thereby, provides a new understanding of enzyme-ACP interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The possibility that human cells contain, in addition to the cytosolic type I fatty acid synthase complex, a mitochondrial type II malonyl-CoA-dependent system for the biosynthesis of fatty acids has been examined by cloning, expressing, and characterizing two putative components. Candidate coding sequences for a malonyl-CoA:acyl carrier protein transacylase (malonyltransferase) and its acyl carrier protein substrate, identified by BLAST searches of the human sequence data base, were located on nuclear chromosomes 22 and 16, respectively. The encoded proteins localized exclusively in mitochondria only when the putative N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequences were present as revealed by confocal microscopy of HeLa cells infected with appropriate green fluorescent protein fusion constructs. The mature, processed forms of the mitochondrial proteins were expressed in Sf9 cells and purified, the acyl carrier protein was converted to the holoform in vitro using purified human phosphopantetheinyltransferase, and the functional interaction of the two proteins was studied. Compared with the dual specificity malonyl/acetyltransferase component of the cytosolic type I fatty acid synthase, the type II mitochondrial counterpart exhibits a relatively narrow substrate specificity for both the acyl donor and acyl carrier protein acceptor. Thus, it forms a covalent acyl-enzyme complex only when incubated with malonyl-CoA and transfers exclusively malonyl moieties to the mitochondrial holoacyl carrier protein. The type II acyl carrier protein from Bacillus subtilis, but not the acyl carrier protein derived from the human cytosolic type I fatty acid synthase, can also function as an acceptor for the mitochondrial transferase. These data provide compelling evidence that human mitochondria contain a malonyl-CoA/acyl carrier protein-dependent fatty acid synthase system, distinct from the type I cytosolic fatty acid synthase, that resembles the type II system present in prokaryotes and plastids. The final products of this system, yet to be identified, may play an important role in mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to resolve the controversy as to whether or not chloroplasts possess the enzyme carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT) and whether the activity of this enzyme is sufficient to support previously reported rates of fatty acid synthesis from acetylcarnitine. CAT catalyses the freely reversible reaction: carnitine + short-chain acylCoA <--> short-chain acylcarnitine + CoASH. CAT activity was detected in thc chloroplasts of Pisum sativum L. With membrane-impermeable acetyl CoA as a substrate. activity was only detected in ruptured chloroplasts and not with intact chloroplasts, indicating that the enzyme was located on the stromal side of the envelope. In crude preparations, CAT could only be detected using a sensitive radioenzymatic assay due to competing reactions from other enzymes using acetyl CoA and large amounts of ultraviolet-absorbing materials. After partial purification of the enzyme, CAT was detected in both the forward and reverse directions using spectrophotometric assays. Rates of 100 nmol of product formed per minute per milligram of protein were obtained, which is sufficient to support reported fatty acid synthesis rates from acetylcarnitine. Chloroplastic CAT showed optimal activity at pH 8.5 and had a high substrate specificity, handling C2-C4 acyl CoAs only. We believe that CAT has been satisfactorily demonstrated in pea chloroplasts.  相似文献   

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