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1.
Fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (FACS, fatty acid:CoA ligase, AMP-forming, EC ) catalyzes the esterification of fatty acids to CoA thioesters for further metabolism and is hypothesized to play a pivotal role in the coupled transport and activation of exogenous long-chain fatty acids in Escherichia coli. Previous work on the bacterial enzyme identified a highly conserved region (FACS signature motif) common to long- and medium-chain acyl-CoA synthetases, which appears to contribute to the fatty acid binding pocket. In an effort to further define the fatty acid-binding domain within this enzyme, we employed the affinity labeled long-chain fatty acid [(3)H]9-p-azidophenoxy nonanoic acid (APNA) to specifically modify the E. coli FACS. [(3)H]APNA labeling of the purified enzyme was saturable and specific for long-chain fatty acids as shown by the inhibition of modification with increasing concentrations of palmitate. The site of APNA modification was identified by digestion of [(3)H]APNA cross-linked FACS with trypsin and separation and purification of the resultant peptides using reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. One specific (3)H-labeled peptide, T33, was identified and following purification subjected to NH(2)-terminal sequence analysis. This approach yielded the peptide sequence PDATDEIIK, which corresponded to residues 422 to 430 of FACS. This peptide is immediately adjacent to the region of the enzyme that contains the FACS signature motif (residues 431-455). This work represents the first direct identification of the carboxyl-containing substrate-binding domain within the adenylate-forming family of enzymes. The structural model for the E. coli FACS predicts this motif lies within a cleft separating two distinct domains of the enzyme and is adjacent to a region that contains the AMP/ATP signature motif, which together are likely to represent the catalytic core of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Although each of the five mammalian long-chain acyl-CoA synthetases (ACSL) can bind saturated and unsaturated fatty acids ranging from 12 to 22 carbons, ACSL4 prefers longer chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. In order to gain a better understanding of ACSL4 fatty acid binding, we based a mutagenesis approach on sequence alignments related to ttLC-FACS crystallized from Thermus thermophilus HB8. Four residues selected for mutagenesis corresponded to residues in ttLC-FACS that comprise the fatty acid binding pocket; the fifth residue aligned with a region thought to be involved in fatty acid selectivity of the Escherichia coli acyl-CoA synthetase, FadD. Changing an amino acid at the entry of the putative fatty acid binding pocket, G401L, resulted in an inactive enzyme. Mutating a residue near the pocket entry, L399M, did not significantly alter enzyme activity, but mutating a residue at the hydrophobic terminus of the pocket, S291Y, altered ACSL4's preference for 20:5 and 22:6 and increased its apparent K(m) for ATP. Mutating a site in a region previously identified as important for fatty acid binding also altered activation of 20:4 and 20:5. These studies suggested that the preference of ACSL4 for long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids can be modified by altering specific amino acid residues.  相似文献   

3.
Bile acid-CoA:amino acid N-acyltransferase (BACAT) catalyzes the conjugation of bile acids to glycine and taurine for excretion into bile. By use of site-directed mutagenesis and sequence comparisons, we have identified Cys-235, Asp-328, and His-362 as constituting a catalytic triad in human BACAT (hBACAT) and identifying BACAT as a member of the type I acyl-CoA thioesterase gene family. We therefore hypothesized that hBACAT may also hydrolyze fatty acyl-CoAs and/or conjugate fatty acids to glycine. We show here that recombinant hBACAT also can hydrolyze long- and very long-chain saturated acyl-CoAs (mainly C16:0-C26:0) and by mass spectrometry verified that hBACAT also conjugates fatty acids to glycine. Tissue expression studies showed strong expression of BACAT in liver, gallbladder, and the proximal and distal intestine. However, BACAT is also expressed in a variety of tissues unrelated to bile acid formation and transport, suggesting important functions also in the regulation of intracellular levels of very long-chain fatty acids. Green fluorescent protein localization experiments in human skin fibroblasts showed that the hBACAT enzyme is mainly cytosolic. Therefore, the cytosolic BACAT enzyme may play important roles in protection against toxicity by accumulation of unconjugated bile acids and non-esterified very long-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Bovine liver catalase (hydrogen-peroxide:hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.6) was derivatized by 9″(10″)-[4′-{2-(4,6-dichloro-1,3,5-triazinyl)oxy}butoxy]stearic acid and the fatty acyl-coated enzyme was separated from native catalase and excess reagent by hydroxyapatite chromatography. The derivatization of catalase resulted in coupling the long-chain fatty acyl residues to lysine, histidine and arginine, while other amino acids remained essentially unaffected. The fatty acyl-coated enzyme was water soluble at pH > 7.0 but became octanol and ether soluble at pH < 6.5. The derivatized enzyme retained 50–80% of the catalatic- and peroxidative-specific activities. The free carboxyl function of the coupled long-chain fattyl acyl residues could serve as substrate for ATP-dependent CoA-thioesterification catalyzed by the rat liver microsomal long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthase.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine liver catalase (hydrogen-peroxide:hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.6) was derivatized by 9"(10")-[4'-(2-(4,6-dichloro-1,3,5-triazinyl) oxy)butoxy] stearic acid and the fatty acyl-coated enzyme was separated from native catalase and excess reagent by hydroxyapatite chromatography. The derivatization of catalase resulted in coupling the long-chain fatty acyl residues to lysine, histidine and arginine, while other amino acids remained essentially unaffected. The fatty acyl-coated enzyme was water soluble at pH greater than 7.0 but became octanol and ether soluble at pH less than 6.5. The derivatized enzyme retained 50-80% of the catalatic- and peroxidative-specific activities. The free carboxyl function of the coupled long-chain fattyl acyl residues could serve as substrate for ATP-dependent CoA-thioesterification catalyzed by the rat liver microsomal long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthase.  相似文献   

7.
The processes that govern the regulated transport of long-chain fatty acids across the plasma membrane are quite distinct compared to counterparts involved in the transport of hydrophilic solutes such as sugars and amino acids. These differences stem from the unique physical and chemical properties of long-chain fatty acids. To date, several distinct classes of proteins have been shown to participate in the transport of exogenous long-chain fatty acids across the membrane. More recent work is consistent with the hypothesis that in addition to the role played by proteins in this process, there is a diffusional component which must also be considered. Central to the development of this hypothesis are the appropriate experimental systems, which can be manipulated using the tools of molecular genetics. Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae are ideally suited as model systems to study this process in that both (i) exhibit saturable long-chain fatty acid transport at low ligand concentrations, (ii) have specific membrane-bound and membrane-associated proteins that are components of the transport apparatus, and (iii) can be easily manipulated using the tools of molecular genetics. In both systems, central players in the process of fatty acid transport are fatty acid transport proteins (FadL or Fat1p) and fatty acyl coenzyme A (CoA) synthetase (FACS; fatty acid CoA ligase [AMP forming] [EC 6.2.1.3]). FACS appears to function in concert with FadL (bacteria) or Fat1p (yeast) in the conversion of the free fatty acid to CoA thioesters concomitant with transport, thereby rendering this process unidirectional. This process of trapping transported fatty acids represents one fundamental mechanism operational in the transport of exogenous fatty acids.  相似文献   

8.
Peroxisomes are organelles that function in the beta-oxidation of long- and very long-chain acyl-CoAs, bile acid-CoA intermediates, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, thromboxanes, dicarboxylic fatty acids, pristanic acid, and xenobiotic carboxylic acids. The very long- and long-chain acyl-CoAs are mainly chain-shortened and then transported to mitochondria for further metabolism. We have now identified and characterized two peroxisomal acyl-CoA thioesterases, named PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic, that hydrolyze acyl-CoAs to the free fatty acid and coenzyme A. PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic show 82% sequence identity at the amino acid level, and a putative peroxisomal type 1 targeting signal of -AKL was identified at the carboxyl-terminal end of both proteins. Localization experiments using green fluorescent fusion protein showed PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic to be localized in peroxisomes. Despite their high level of sequence identity, we show that PTE-Ia is mainly active on long-chain acyl-CoAs, whereas PTE-Ic is mainly active on medium-chain acyl-CoAs. Lack of regulation of enzyme activity by free CoASH suggests that PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic regulate intraperoxisomal levels of acyl-CoA, and they may have a function in termination of beta-oxidation of fatty acids of different chain lengths. Tissue expression studies revealed that PTE-Ia is highly expressed in kidney, whereas PTE-Ic is most highly expressed in spleen, brain, testis, and proximal and distal intestine. Both PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic were highly up-regulated in mouse liver by treatment with the peroxisome proliferator WY-14,643 and by fasting in a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha-dependent manner. These data show that PTE-Ia and PTE-Ic have different functions based on different substrate specificities and tissue expression.  相似文献   

9.
Acyl-CoA synthetases play a pivotal role in fatty acid metabolism, providing activated substrates for fatty acid catabolic and anabolic pathways. Acyl-CoA synthetases comprise numerous proteins with diverse substrate specificities, tissue expression patterns, and subcellular localizations, suggesting that each enzyme directs fatty acids toward a specific metabolic fate. We reported that hBG1, the human homolog of the acyl-CoA synthetase mutated in the Drosophila mutant "bubblegum," belongs to a previously unidentified enzyme family and is capable of activating both long- and very long-chain fatty acid substrates. We now report that when overexpressed, hBG1 can activate diverse saturated, monosaturated, and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, we detected expression of mBG1, the mouse homolog of hBG1, in cerebral cortical and cerebellar neurons and in steroidogenic cells of the adrenal gland, testis, and ovary. The expression pattern and ability of BG1 to activate very long-chain fatty acids implicates this enzyme in the pathogenesis of X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. In neuron-derived Neuro2a cells, mBG1 co-sedimented with mitochondria and was found in small vesicular structures located in close proximity to mitochondria. RNA interference was used to decrease mBG1 expression in Neuro2a cells and led to a 30-35% decrease in activation and beta-oxidation of the long-chain fatty acid, palmitate. These results suggest that in Neuro2a cells, mBG1-activated long-chain fatty acids are directed toward mitochondrial degradation. mBG1 appears to play a minor role in very long-chain fatty acid activation in these cells, indicating that other acyl-CoA synthetases are necessary for very long-chain fatty acid metabolism in Neuro2a cells.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the activation of pristanic acid to its CoA-ester in rat liver. The results show that peroxisomes, mitochondria as well as microsomes contain pristanoyl-CoA synthetase activity. On the basis of competition experiments and immunoprecipitation studies using antibodies raised against rat liver microsomal long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (EC 6.2.1.3) we conclude that pristanic acid is activated by the same enzyme which activates long-chain fatty acids, i.e., long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase.  相似文献   

11.
The product of the fadL gene (FadL) of Escherichia coli is a multifunctional integral outer-membrane protein required for the specific binding and transport of exogenous long-chain fatty acids [C12-C18]. FadL also serves as a receptor for the bacteriophage T2. In order to define regions of functional importance within FadL, the fadL gene has been mutagenized by the insertion of single-stranded hexameric linkers into the unique SalI restriction site that lies towards the 3' end of the gene and into four HpaII restriction sites distributed throughout the coding region. The five insertion mutants were classified into three groups based on their specific growth rates (alpha) in minimal media containing the long-chain fatty acid oleate (C18:1) as a sole carbon and energy source: Oleslow, alpha = 0.035-0.045; Ole +/-, alpha = 0.020-0.035; and Ole-, alpha less than or equal to 0.005 (wild-type, alpha = 0.07-0.10). The hexameric insertion at the SalI site (fadL allele termed S1; insertion after amino acid 410) conferred an Oleslow phenotype and resulted in a reduction of long-chain fatty acid transport (36% the wild-type level). This insertion mutant, however, bound oleic acid at wild-type levels and was fully functional as a receptor for the bacteriophage T2. The modified FadL-S1 protein did not have the heat-modifiable property characteristic of wild-type FadL. Insertions in the four HpaII sites (fadL alleles termed H1, H2, H3, and H5; after amino acids 41, 81, 238, and 389, respectively) resulted in all three classes of mutants. The fadL insertion mutant H5 was defective for long-chain fatty acid transport but bound oleic acid at significant levels. Together with the S1 allele, these data suggest that the carboxyl terminus of FadL is crucial for long-chain fatty acid transport. The insertion mutants H1 and H2 were defective for both oleic acid binding and transport suggesting that the amino terminus of FadL is important for long-chain fatty acid binding and transport. The fadL linker mutant H3 was defective in oleic acid binding yet had significant levels of oleic acid transport. These studies delineated for the first time different regions of the fadL gene that encode domains of FadL implicated in the binding and transport of long-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

12.
In higher plants, fat-storing seeds utilize storage lipids as a source of energy during germination. To enter the beta-oxidation pathway, fatty acids need to be activated to acyl-coenzyme As (CoAs) by the enzyme acyl-CoA synthetase (ACS; EC 6.2.1.3). Here, we report the characterization of an Arabidopsis cDNA clone encoding for a glyoxysomal acyl-CoA synthetase designated AtLACS6. The cDNA sequence is 2,106 bp long and it encodes a polypeptide of 701 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 76,617 D. Analysis of the amino-terminal sequence indicates that acyl-CoA synthetase is synthesized as a larger precursor containing a cleavable amino-terminal presequence so that the mature polypeptide size is 663 amino acids. The presequence shows high similarity to the typical PTS2 (peroxisomal targeting signal 2). The AtLACS6 also shows high amino acid identity to prokaryotic and eukaryotic fatty acyl-CoA synthetases. Immunocytochemical and cell fractionation analyses indicated that the AtLACS6 is localized on glyoxysomal membranes. AtLACS6 was overexpressed in insect cells and purified to near homogeneity. The purified enzyme is particularly active on long-chain fatty acids (C16:0). Results from immunoblot analysis revealed that the expression of both AtLACS6 and beta-oxidation enzymes coincide with fatty acid degradation. These data suggested that AtLACS6 might play a regulatory role both in fatty acid import into glyoxysomes by making a complex with other factors, e.g. PMP70, and in fatty acid beta-oxidation activating the fatty acids.  相似文献   

13.
Structure and regulation of rat long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Complementary DNAs encoding rat long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase have been isolated. The cDNAs were identified using synthetic oligonucleotide probes based on partial amino acid sequences of lysyl endopeptidase peptides of the purified enzyme. Rat long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase is predicted to contain 699 amino acid residues and to have a calculated molecular weight of 78,177. Significant sequence similarity was found between parts of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase and firefly luciferase. Based on the similarity of the reaction mechanisms of the two enzymes, we propose a function for the similar region. The long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase mRNA is expressed in liver, heart, and epididymal adipose tissues and, to a much lesser extent, in brain, small intestine, and lung. The level of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase mRNA is increased 7-8-fold in rat liver by feeding a diet high in carbohydrate or fat, consistent with the physiological significance of the enzyme in fatty acid metabolism.  相似文献   

14.
Cardiovascular disease and long-chain omega-3 fatty acids   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Of all known dietary factors, long-chain omega-3 fatty acids may be the most protective against death from coronary heart disease. New evidence has confirmed and refined the cardioprotective role of these fatty acids. RECENT FINDINGS: Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation reduces the risk of sudden cardiac death and death from any cause within 4 months in post-myocardial infarction patients. Evidence continues to accrue for benefits in the primary prevention of coronary heart disease and stroke, and an anti-arrhythmogenic mechanism is emerging as the most likely explanation. SUMMARY: Current evidence suggests that individuals with coronary artery disease may reduce their risk of sudden cardiac death by increasing their intake of long-chain omega-3 fatty acids by approximately 1 g per day.  相似文献   

15.
P Jiang  J E Cronan  Jr 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(10):2814-2821
The effects of inhibition of Escherichia coli phospholipid synthesis on the accumulation of intermediates of the fatty acid synthetic pathway have been previously investigated with conflicting results. We report construction of an E. coli strain that allows valid [14C]acetate labeling of fatty acids under these conditions. In this strain, acetate is a specific precursor of fatty acid synthesis and the intracellular acetate pools are not altered by blockage of phospholipid synthesis. By use of this strain, we show that significant pools of fatty acid synthetic intermediates and free fatty acids accumulate during inhibition of phospholipid synthesis and that the rate of synthesis of these intermediates is 10 to 20% of the rate at which fatty acids are synthesized during normal growth. Free fatty acids of abnormal chain length (e.g., cis-13-eicosenoic acid) were found to accumulate in glycerol-starved cultures. Analysis of extracts of [35S]methionine-labeled cells showed that glycerol starvation resulted in the accumulation of several long-chain acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) species, with the major species being ACP acylated with cis-13-eicosenoic acid. Upon the restoration of phospholipid biosynthesis, the abnormally long-chain acyl-ACPs decreased, consistent with transfer of the acyl groups to phospholipid. The introduction of multicopy plasmids that greatly overproduced either E. coli thioesterase I or E. coli thioesterase II fully relieved the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis seen upon glycerol starvation, whereas overexpression of ACP had no effect. Thioesterase I overproduction also resulted in disappearance of the long-chain acyl-ACP species. The release of inhibition by thiosterase overproduction, together with the correlation between the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis and the presence of abnormally long-chain acyl-ACPs, suggests with that these acyl-ACP species may act as feedback inhibitors of a key fatty acid synthetic enzyme(s).  相似文献   

16.
Fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (FACS, fatty acid:CoA ligase, AMP forming; EC ) plays a central role in intermediary metabolism by catalyzing the formation of fatty acyl-CoA. In Escherichia coli this enzyme, encoded by the fadD gene, is required for the coupled import and activation of exogenous long-chain fatty acids. The E. coli FACS (FadD) contains two sequence elements, which comprise the ATP/AMP signature motif ((213)YTGGTTGVAKGA(224) and (356)GYGLTE(361)) placing it in the superfamily of adenylate-forming enzymes. A series of site-directed mutations were generated in the fadD gene within the ATP/AMP signature motif site to evaluate the role of this conserved region to enzyme function and to fatty acid transport. This approach revealed two major classes of fadD mutants with depressed enzyme activity: 1) those with 25-45% wild type activity (fadD(G216A), fadD(T217A), fadD(G219A), and fadD(K222A)) and 2) those with 10% or less wild-type activity (fadD(Y213A), fadD(T214A), and fadD(E361A)). Using anti-FadD sera, Western blots demonstrated the different mutant forms of FadD that were present and had localization patterns equivalent to the wild type. The defect in the first class was attributed to a reduced catalytic efficiency although several mutant forms also had a reduced affinity for ATP. The mutations resulting in these biochemical phenotypes reduced or essentially eliminated the transport of exogenous long-chain fatty acids. These data support the hypothesis that the FACS FadD functions in the vectorial movement of exogenous fatty acids across the plasma membrane by acting as a metabolic trap, which results in the formation of acyl-CoA esters.  相似文献   

17.
The microsomal elongation system from porcine aorta for longchain fatty-acyl-CoAs was investigated. Palmitoleoyl-CoA (16:1-CoA), oleoyl-CoA (18:1-CoA), and eicosenoyl-CoA (20:1-CoA) remarkably depressed the elongation activity for 16:0-CoA in aorta microsomes by 44.8, 52.4, and 43.7% of the control activity, respectively. Saturated and polyunsaturated fatty-acyl-CoAs had little effect on the 16:0-CoA elongation activity. These results indicate that monounsaturated long-chain fatty acyl-CoAs can regulate the synthesis of saturated fatty acids in the vessel walls.  相似文献   

18.
Pancreatic colipase is a 12-kDa polypeptide cofactor for pancreatic lipase (EC 3.1.1.3), an enzyme essential for the absorption of dietary long-chain triglyceride fatty acids. Colipase is thought to anchor lipase noncovalently to the surface of lipid micelles, counteracting the destabilizing influence of intestinal bile salts. Using primers derived from the known amino acid sequence, we have used the polymerase chain reaction to produce a cDNA clone corresponding to the complete coding region of the human procolipase mRNA. Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA from a panel of mouse-human somatic cell hybrids indicated that the colipase gene (CLPS) resides on human chromosome 6. Further analysis of somatic cell hybrids carrying chromosome 6 translocations permitted regional localization of CLPS to the 6p21.1-pter region.  相似文献   

19.
Antarctic notothenioid fishes possess large lipid stores that are important fuels for aerobic metabolism. Oxidative muscle tissues of these animals oxidize long-chain mono-unsaturated fatty acids more readily than saturated fatty acids. The mechanistic basis(es) for the substrate specificity of their fatty acid-oxidizing pathway is unknown. We examined the substrate specificity of fatty acyl coenzyme A synthetase (FACS) to determine whether the enzyme contributes to targeting unsaturated fatty acids for preferential transport into mitochondria as fuels for beta-oxidation. Maximal activities of FACS were measured in isolated mitochondria from Notothenia coriiceps and Chaenocephalus aceratus oxidative skeletal muscles in the presence of fatty acids differing in chain lengths and degrees of unsaturation. With the exception of C(22:6), maximal activities were greater with unsaturated substrates than with C(16:0), a saturated fatty acid. Monoenoic fatty acids did not produce the highest activities. Predicted amino acid sequences of FACS from Antarctic C. aceratus, Gobionotothen gibberifrons, and N. coriiceps and sub-Antarctic Notothenia angustata and Eleginops maclovinus were determined to identify amino acid candidates that may be important for determining the substrate specificity of FACS. Substitutions cysteine548 and polar threonine552 within the putative fatty acid binding pocket may contribute to preference for unsaturated fatty acyl substrates compared to saturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

20.
A genomic fatty acid elongation 1 ( FAE1 ) clone was isolated from Crambe abyssinica . The genomic clone corresponds to a 1521-bp open reading frame, which encodes a protein of 507 amino acids. In yeast cells expression of CrFAE led to production of new very long chain monounsaturated fatty acids such as eicosenoic (20 : 1Δ11) and erucic (22 : 1Δ13) acids. Seed-specific expression in Arabidopsis thaliana resulted in up to a 12-fold increase in the proportion of erucic acid. On the other hand, in transgenic high-erucic Brassica carinata plants, the proportion of erucic acid was as high as 51.9% in the best transgenic line, a net increase of 40% compared to wild type. These results indicate that the CrFAE gene encodes a condensing enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of very long-chain fatty acids utilizing monounsaturated and saturated acyl substrates, with a strong capability for improving the erucic acid content.  相似文献   

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