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1.
To investigate the role of acyl carrier protein (ACP) in determining the fate of the acyl moieties linked to it in the course of de-novo fatty acid biosynthesis in higher plants, we carried out in vitro experiments to reconstitute the fatty acid synthase (FAS) reaction in extracts of spinach (Spinaciaoleracea L.) leaves, rape (Brassicanapus L.) seeds and Cuphea lanceolata Ait. seeds. The action of two major C. lanceolata ACP isoforms (ACP 1 and ACP 2) compared to ACP from Escherichia coli was monitored by saponification of the corresponding FAS products with subsequent analysis of the liberated fatty acids by high-performance liquid chromatography. In a second approach the preference of the medium-chain acyl-ACP-specific thioesterase (EC 3.1.2.14) of C. lanceolata seeds for the hydrolysis of acyl-ACPs prepared from the three ACP types was investigated. Both ACP isoforms from C. lanceolata seeds supported the synthesis of medium-chain fatty acids in a reconstituted FAS reaction of spinach leaf extracts. Compared to the isoform ACP 1, ACP 2 was more effective in supporting the synthesis of such fatty acids in the FAS reaction of rape seed extracts and caused a higher accumulation of FAS products in all experiments. No preference of the medium-chain thioesterase for one specific ACP isoform was observed. The results indicate that the presence of ACP 2 is essential for the synthesis of decanoic acid in C. lanceolata seeds, and its expression in the phase of accumulation of high levels of this fatty acid provides an additional and highly efficient cofactor for stimulating the FAS reaction. Received: 23 June 1997 / Accepted: 23 October 1997  相似文献   

2.
Two acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterases were partially purified from developing seeds of Cuphea lanceolata Ait., a plant with decanoic acid-rich triacylglycerols. The two enzymes differ markedly in their substrate specificity. One is specific for medium-chain acyl-ACPs, the other one for oleoyl-ACP. In addition, these enzymes are distinct with regard to molecular weight, pH optimum and sensitivity to salt. The thioesterases could be separated by Mono Q chromatography or gel filtration. The medium-chain acyl-ACP thioesterase and oleoyl-ACP thioesterase were purified from a crude extract 29- and 180-fold, respectively. In Cuphea wrightii A. Gray, which predominantly contains decanoic a nd lauric acid in the seeds, two different thioesterases were also found with a similar substrate specificity as in Cuphea lanceolata.  相似文献   

3.
During their rapid maturation period, seeds of Cuphea wrightii A. Gray mainly accumulate medium-chain fatty acids (C8 to C14) in their storage lipids. The rate of lipid deposition (40–50 mg·d–1·(g fresh weight)–1) is fourfold higher than in seeds of Cuphea racemosa (L. f.) Spreng, which accumulate long-chain fatty acids (C16 to C18). Measurements of the key enzymes of fatty-acid synthesis in cell-free extracts of seeds of different maturities from Cuphea wrightii show that malonyl-CoA synthesis may be a triggering factor for the observed high capacity for fatty-acid synthesis. Experiments on the incorporation of [1-14C]acetate into fatty acids by purified plastid preparations from embryos of Cuphea wrightii have demonstrated that the biosynthesis of medium-chain fatty acids (C8 to C14) is localized in the plastid. Thus, in the presence of cofactors for lipid synthesis (ATP, NADPH, NADH, acyl carrier protein, and sn-glycerol-3-phosphate), purified plastid fractions predominantly synthesized free fatty acids, 30% of which were of medium chain length. Transesterification of the freshly synthesized fatty acids to coenzyme A and recombination with the microsomal fraction of the embryo homogenate induced triacylglycerol synthesis. It also stimulated fatty-acid synthesis by a factor 2–3 and increased the relative amount of medium-chain fatty acids bound to triacylglycerols, which corresponded to about 60–80% in this lipid fraction.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - FW fresh weight This work was supported by the Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie. The authors thank S. Borchert for her suggestions for plastid preparation.  相似文献   

4.
 Gene sequences are rapidly accumulating for many commercially and scientifically important plants. These resources create the basis for developing sequence-based markers for mapping and tracking known (candidate) genes, thereby increasing the utility of genetic maps. Members of most of the gene families underlying the synthesis of seed oil fatty acids have been cloned from the medium-chain oilseed Cuphea. Allele-specific-PCR (AS-PCR) and single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) markers were developed for 22 fatty acid synthesis genes belonging to seven gene families of Cuphea using homologous and heterologous DNA sequences. Markers were developed for 4 fatty-acyl-acyl carrier protein thioesterase, 2 β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase I, 4 β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase II, 3 β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III, 3 acyl carrier protein, 2 β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein reductase, and 4 enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase loci. Eighty-eight percent (14 of 16) of the SSCP loci were polymorphic, whereas only 9% (2 of 22) of the AS-PCR loci were polymorphic. These markers were mapped using a Cuphea viscosissima×C. lanceolata F2 population and produced linkage groups of 10, 3, and 2 loci (3 loci segregated independently). The 10-locus linkage group had every gene but one necessary for the synthesis of 2- to 16-carbon fatty acids from acetyl-CoA and malonyl-ACP (the missing gene family was not mapped). SSCP analysis has broad utility for DNA fingerprinting and mapping genes and gene families. Received: 3 May 1996 / Accepted: 30 August 1996  相似文献   

5.
With the aim of elucidating the mechanisms involved in the biosynthesis of medium-chain fatty acids in Cuphea lanceolata Ait., a crop accumulating up to 90% decanoic acid in seed triacylglycerols, cDNA clones of a beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase IV (clKAS IV, EC 2.3.1.41) were isolated from C. lanceolata seed embryos. The amino acid sequence deduced from clKAS IV cDNA showed 80% identity to other plant KAS II-type enzymes, 55% identity towards plant KAS I and over 90% towards other Cuphea KAS IV-type sequences. Recombinant clKAS IV was functionally overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and substrate specificity of purified enzyme showed strong preference for elongation of short-chain and medium-chain acyl-ACPs (C4- to C10-ACP) with nearly equal activity. Further elongation steps were catalysed with distinctly less activity. Moreover, short- and medium-chain acyl-ACPs exerted a chain-length-specific and concentration-dependent substrate inhibition of clKAS IV. Based on these findings a regulatory mechanism for medium-chain fatty acid synthesis in C. lanceolata is presented.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined production of mediumchain fatty acids by Brassica napus L. plants transformed with a California bay (Umbellularia californica) medium-chain acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterase (UcFatB1) cDNA under the control of the constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. These plants were found to accumulate medium-chain fatty acids in seeds but not in leaves or roots. Assay of thioesterase activity in extracts of leaves indicated that lauroyl-ACP thioesterase activity is comparable to oleoyl-ACP thioesterase (EC 3.1.2.14) activity in transformant leaves. Furthermore, leaf lauroyl-ACP thioesterase activity was in excess of that which produced a significant increase in the amount of laurate (12:0) in seed. Studies in which isolated chloroplasts were 14C-labelled were used to evaluate whether medium-chain fatty acids were produced in transformed leaves. Up to 34% of the fatty acids synthesized in vitro by isolated chloroplasts were 12:0. These results demonstrate that the normally seed-localized lauroyl-ACP thioesterase can be expressed in active form in leaves, imported into chloroplasts and can access acyl-ACP intermediates of leaf de-novo fatty acid synthesis. The most likely explanation for the lack of accumulation of 12:0 in transformed leaves is its rapid degradation by -oxidation. In support of this hypothesis, isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1) activity was found to be significantly increased in plants transformed with 35S-UcFatB1.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - control Brassica napus cultivar 212/86 - event 8 pCGN3831-212/86-8 - event 11 pCGN3831-212/86-11 - FAS fatty acid synthase - IL isocitrate lyase - KAS -keto-acyl ACP synthase - MS malate synthase - OTE oleoyl-ACP thioesterase - TAG triacylglycerol - UcFatB1 California bay medium-chain acyl-ACP thioesterase We are indebted to Calgene's Brossica-transformation, growth-chamber, greenhouse, and lipid-analysis personnel. Maelor Davies conducted the initial tranformant analysis. We thank Laura Olsen for IL and MS Western blot analysis and advice on IL and MS activity assays. This work was supported in part by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (No. DE-FG02-87ER12729). Acknowledgement is made to the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station for its support of this research.  相似文献   

7.
Biofuel from fatty acids with chain lengths of 8–15 (C8–C15) have properties similar to those of conventional diesel and jet fuels, thus, can save time and reduce costs for the refurbishment of engines and maintenance of oiling facilities. Most oil‐producing algae yield C16–C18 fatty acids; however, the manipulation of algae using genetic engineering is a promising approach to obtain C8–C15 fatty acids. The introduction of a medium‐chain‐specific thioesterase (TE) is expected to effectively alter algae to produce medium‐chain fatty acids (MCFAs). TE is the main determinant of fatty acid chain length as it releases fatty acids from the acyl carrier protein (ACP) in the fatty acid elongation cycle. In a previous study, the introduction of heterologous C8–C12‐specific TEs into Chlamydomonas reinhardtii did not increase the yield of MCFAs. This effect was attributed to a low affinity of the heterologous TEs to C. reinhardtii ACP. Therefore, we introduced both the C10–C14‐specific TE gene and the ACP gene from the land plant Cuphea lanceolata into C. reinhardtii. We measured free fatty acids (FFAs) and triacylglycerols (TAGs) in the transformants using liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. The production of C12:0 and C14:0, chain length 12 and 14 without unsaturation, FFAs was not significantly increased in any of the tested strains. However, we found a slight but significant increase in TAG‐containing MCFAs in both TE only and TE–ACP transformants. The increased production rate of C14:0‐containing TAGs ranged from 1.25‐ to 1.58‐fold, indicating the ability of medium‐chain‐specific TE to increase MCFAs. These results suggest that the selection of specific TEs is important when modifying eukaryotic algae to produce MCFAs.  相似文献   

8.
Seed oils enriched in omega‐7 monounsaturated fatty acids, including palmitoleic acid (16:1?9) and cis‐vaccenic acid (18:1?11), have nutraceutical and industrial value for polyethylene production and biofuels. Existing oilseed crops accumulate only small amounts (<2%) of these novel fatty acids in their seed oils. We demonstrate a strategy for enhanced production of omega‐7 monounsaturated fatty acids in camelina (Camelina sativa) and soybean (Glycine max) that is dependent on redirection of metabolic flux from the typical ?9 desaturation of stearoyl (18:0)‐acyl carrier protein (ACP) to ?9 desaturation of palmitoyl (16:0)‐acyl carrier protein (ACP) and coenzyme A (CoA). This was achieved by seed‐specific co‐expression of a mutant ?9‐acyl‐ACP and an acyl‐CoA desaturase with high specificity for 16:0‐ACP and CoA substrates, respectively. This strategy was most effective in camelina where seed oils with ~17% omega‐7 monounsaturated fatty acids were obtained. Further increases in omega‐7 fatty acid accumulation to 60–65% of the total fatty acids in camelina seeds were achieved by inclusion of seed‐specific suppression of 3‐keto‐acyl‐ACP synthase II and the FatB 16:0‐ACP thioesterase genes to increase substrate pool sizes of 16:0‐ACP for the ?9‐acyl‐ACP desaturase and by blocking C18 fatty acid elongation. Seeds from these lines also had total saturated fatty acids reduced to ~5% of the seed oil versus ~12% in seeds of nontransformed plants. Consistent with accumulation of triacylglycerol species with shorter fatty acid chain lengths and increased monounsaturation, seed oils from engineered lines had marked shifts in thermotropic properties that may be of value for biofuel applications.  相似文献   

9.
The cerulenin-insensitive -ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase III (KAS III, EC 2.3.1.41) catalyzes the first condensing step of the fatty-acid synthase (FAS) reaction in plants and bacteria, using directly acetyl-CoA as substrate for condensation with malonyl-ACP. In order to identify a possible site for regulation of the biosynthesis of medium-chain fatty acids, the influence of acyl-ACPs of different chain-lengths (C4,C6,C8 and C10) on the activity of KAS III was investigated in vitro using an FAS preparation from seeds of Cuphea lanceolata Ait. (a crop accumulating up to 90% decanoic acid into triacylglycerols) that had been treated with 100 M cerulenin. All acyl-ACPs investigated led to a decrease in the activity of KAS III towards acetyl-CoA, an effect apparently related to the length of the acyl chain. Analysis of the reaction products of the assay revealed that short-chain acyl-ACPs elongated to a very small extent simultaneously with acetyl-CoA. This extent of elongation did not correlate with the decrease in KAS III-activity levels. These data excluded the possibility of competition between acetyl-CoA and acyl-ACPs, but indicated that acyl-ACPs inhibited the enzyme. Decanoyl-ACP caused the highest decrease in enzyme activity (IC50 = 0.45 M), thus being a potent inhibitor of KAS III. Michaelis-Menten kinetics revealed that the inhibition of KAS III by decanoyl-ACP was non-competitive in relation to malonyl-ACP and uncompetitive in relation to acetyl-CoA. Moreover, our data indicate that KAS III has a strict specificity for the elongation of acetyl-CoA. An inhibition of KAS III by acyl-ACPs was observed in experiments using FAS preparations from rape seeds and spinach leaves, but the inhibition of KAS III from C. lanceolata seeds by decanoyl-ACP was approximately 1.5-fold higher. The data provide evidence that acyl-ACPs are involved in the modulation of plant fatty-acid biosynthesis by a feed-back mechanism.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - DTT dithiothreitol - TCA trichloroacetic acid - ecACP acyl carrier protein from Escherichia coli - FAS fatty-acid synthase - IC50 concentration causing 50% inhibition - KAS -ketoacyl-ACP synthase - NEM N-ethylmaleimide In honour of Professor Hartmut K. Lichtenthaler's sixtieth birthdayThis work was supported by a grant from the German Ministry of Research and Technology (BMFT) and in part by the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie and the Ministry of Science and Research of the State Northrhine-Westfalia. The authors wish to thank Prof. G. Röbbelen (University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany) for kindly providing the plant material. This paper is part of the doctoral thesis of Fritzi Maike Brück.  相似文献   

10.
The activity of fatty acid synthetase (FAS) from Vibrio sp. strain ABE-1 required the presence of acyl carrier protein and was completely inhibited by thiolactomycin, an inhibitor specific for a type II FAS. These observations indicate that this enzyme is a type II FAS. Analysis by gas-liquid chromotography of the reaction products synthesized in vitro from [2-14C]malonyl-CoA by the partially purified FAS revealed, in addition to 16-and 18-carbon fatty acids which are normal constituents of this bacterium, the presence of fatty acids with very long chains. These fatty acids were identified as saturated and mono-unsaturated fatty acids with 20 up to as many as 30 carbon atoms. The longest fatty acids normally found in this bacterium contain 18-carbon atoms. These results suggest that the FAS from Vibrio sp. strain ABE-1 has potentially the ability to synthesize fatty acids with very long chains.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - FAME fatty acid methyl ester - FAS fatty acid synthetase - FID flame ionization detection - GLC gas-liquid chromatography - TLC thin-layer chromatography - In designations of fatty acids, such as 16:0, 16:1, etc the colon separates the number that denotes the number of carbon atoms and the number that denotes the number of double bonds, respectively, in the molecule - 16:0-CoA CoA ester of 16:0  相似文献   

11.
Acyl‐CoA and acyl‐acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthetases activate exogenous fatty acids for incorporation into phospholipids in Gram‐negative bacteria. However, Gram‐positive bacteria utilize an acyltransferase pathway for the biogenesis of phosphatidic acid that begins with the acylation of sn‐glycerol‐3‐phosphate by PlsY using an acyl‐phosphate (acyl‐PO4) intermediate. PlsX generates acyl‐PO4 from the acyl‐ACP end‐products of fatty acid synthesis. The plsX gene of Staphylococcus aureus was inactivated and the resulting strain was both a fatty acid auxotroph and required de novo fatty acid synthesis for growth. Exogenous fatty acids were only incorporated into the 1‐position and endogenous acyl groups were channeled into the 2‐position of the phospholipids in strain PDJ39 (ΔplsX). Extracellular fatty acids were not elongated. Removal of the exogenous fatty acid supplement led to the rapid accumulation of intracellular acyl‐ACP and the abrupt cessation of fatty acid synthesis. Extracts from the ΔplsX strain exhibited an ATP‐dependent fatty acid kinase activity, and the acyl‐PO4 was converted to acyl‐ACP when purified PlsX is added. These data reveal the existence of a novel fatty acid kinase pathway for the incorporation of exogenous fatty acids into S. aureus phospholipids.  相似文献   

12.
3-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase (KAS) III catalyses the first condensing step of the fatty acid synthase (FAS) type II reaction in plants and bacteria, using acetyl CoA and malonyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) as substrates. Enzymatic characterization of recombinant KAS III from Cuphea wrightii embryo shows that this enzyme is strongly inhibited by medium-chain acyl-ACP end products of the FAS reaction, i.e. inhibition by lauroyl-ACP was uncompetitive towards acetyl CoA and non-competitive with regard to malonyl-ACP. This indicated a distinct attachment site for regulatory acyl-ACPs. Based on alignment of primary structures of various KAS IIIs and 3-ketoacyl CoA synthases, we suspected the motif G290NTSAAS296 to be responsible for binding of regulatory acyl-ACPs. Deletion of the tetrapeptide G290NTS293 led to a change of secondary structure and complete loss of KAS III condensing activity. Exchange of asparagine291 to aspartate, alanine294 to serine and alanine295 to proline, however, produced mutant enzymes with slightly reduced condensing activity, yet with insensitivity towards acyl-ACPs. To assess the potential of unregulated KAS III as tool in oil production, we designed in vitro experiments employing FAS preparations from medium-chain fatty acid-producing Cuphea lanceolata seeds and long-chain fatty acid-producing rape seeds, each supplemented with a fivefold excess of the N291D KAS III mutant. High amounts of short-chain acyl-ACPs in the case of C. lanceolata, and of medium-chain acyl-ACPs in the case of rape seed preparations, were obtained. This approach targets regulation and offers new possibilities to derive transgenic or non-transgenic plants for production of seed oils with new qualities.  相似文献   

13.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase; EC 6.4.1.2) is a regulatory enzyme of fatty acid synthesis, and in some higher-plant plastids is a multi-subunit complex consisting of biotin carboxylase (BC), biotin-carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), and carboxyl transferase (CT). We recently described a Nicotiana tabacum L. (tobacco) cDNA with a deduced amino acid sequence similar to that of prokaryotic BC. We here provide further biochemical and immunological evidence that this higher-plant polypeptide is an authentic BC component of ACCase. The BC protein co-purified with ACCase activity and with BCCP during gel permeation chromatography of Pisum sativum L. (pea) chloroplast proteins. Antibodies to the Ricinus communis L. (castor) BC co-precipitated ACCase activity and BCCP. During castor seed development, ACCase activity and the levels of BC and BCCP increased and subsequently decreased in parallel, indicating their coordinate regulation. The BC protein comprised about 0.8% of the soluble protein in developing castor seed, and less than 0.05% of the protein in young leaf or root. Polypeptides cross-reacting with antibodies to castor BC were detected in several dicotyledons and in the monocotyledons Hemerocallis fulva L. (day lily), Iris L., and Allium cepa L. (onion), but not in the Gramineae species Hordeum vulgare L. (barley) and Panicum virgatum L. (switchgrass). The castor endosperm and pea chloroplast ACCases were not significantly inhibited by long-chain acyl-acyl carrier protein, free fatty acids or acyl carrier protein. The BC polypeptide was detected throughout Brassica napus L. (rapeseed) embryo development, in contrast to the multi-functional ACCase isoenzyme which was only detected early in development. These results firmly establish the identity of the BC polypeptide in plants and provide insight into the structure, regulation and roles of higherplant ACCases.Abbreviations ACCase acetyl-CoA carboxylase - ACP acyl carrier protein - BC biotin carboxylase - BCCP biotin carboxyl carrier protein - CT carboxyl transferase - MF multi-functional - MS multi-subunit We thank our colleagues Nicki Engeseth and Vicki Eccleston for advice on fatty acid analysis and Sarah Hunter for providing the developing Iris seed. This work was supported in part by grant MCB 9406466 from NSF. Acknowledgement is also made to the Michigan Agriculture Experiment Station for its support of this research.  相似文献   

14.
A. R. Slabas  C. G. Smith 《Planta》1988,175(2):145-152
Immunogold labelling was used to study the distribution of acyl carrier protein (ACP) in Escherichia coli and a variety of plant tissues. In E. coli, ACP is distributed throughout the cytoplasm, confirming the observation of S. Jackowski et al. (1985, J. Bacteriol., 162, 5–8_. In the mesocarp of Avocado (Persea americana) and maturing seeds of oil-seed rape (Brassica napus cv. Jet Neuf), over 95% of the ACP is localised to plastids. The protein is almost exclusively located in the chloroplasts of leaf material from oil-seed rape. Approximately 80% of the gold particles associated with the ACP were further localized to the thylakoid membrane of the chloroplast. Since acetyl-CoA carboxylase has been reported to be localized to the thylakoid membrane (C.G. Kannangara and C.J. Jensen, 1975, Eur. J. Biochem., 54, 25–30), these results are consistent with the view that the two sequential enzymes in fatty-acid synthesis are in close spacial proximity.Abbreviations ACC acetyl CoA carboxylase - ACP acyl carrier protein - FAS fatty-acid synthetase  相似文献   

15.
Medium chain hydrolase (MCH) is an enzyme which regulates the chain length of fatty acid synthesis specifically in the mammary gland of the rat. During lactation, MCH interacts with fatty acid synthase (FAS) to cause premature release of acyl chains, thus providing medium chain fatty acids for synthesis of milk fat. In this study we have investigated the ability of rat MCH to interact with the phylogenetically more distant FAS structure present in plant systems and to cause a perturbation of fatty acid synthesis. Inin vitro experiments, addition of purified MCH to rapeseed homogenates was found to cause a significant perturbation of fatty acid synthesis towards medium chain length products. The rat MCH gene was expressed in transgenic oilseed rape using a seed specific rape acyl carrier protein (ACP) promoter and a rape ACP plastid targeting sequence. Western analysis showed MCH protein to be present in transgenic seed and for its expression to be developmentally regulated in concert with storage lipid synthesis. The chimaeric preprotein was correctly processed and immunogold labelling studies confirmed MCH to be localized within plastid organelles. However, fatty acid analysis of oil from MCH-expressing rape seed showed no significant differences to that from control seed.  相似文献   

16.
During the synthesis of fatty acids and their utilization in plastids, fatty acyl moieties are linked to acyl carrier protein (ACP). In contrast to previously cloned organ-specific ACP isoforms, we have now isolated a cDNA clone for a potentially constitutive ACP isoform from a spinach root library. Identity between the amino acid sequence encoded by this cDNA and N-terminal sequence data for ACP-II protein from spinach leaf indicates that the root cDNA encodes ACP-II. The deduced amino acid sequence for ACP-II shows 62% identity with spinach leaf ACP-I. Southern analysis suggests that multiple ACP genes or pseudogenes occur in the spinach genome. High-stringency northern blot analysis and RNase protection studies confirm that, within the region encoding the mature ACP-II, the cloned ACP sequence is expressed in leaves and seeds as well as in roots. Quantitative RNase protection data indicate that the ratio of ACP-I and ACP-II mRNA sequences in leaf is similar to the ratio of the two proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Fatty acid synthesis in bacteria is catalyzed by a set of individual enzymes known as the type II fatty acid synthase. Acyl carrier protein (ACP) shuttles the acyl intermediates between individual pathway enzymes. In this study, we determined the solution structures of three different forms of ACP, apo‐ACP, ACP, and butyryl‐ACP under identical experimental conditions. The structural studies revealed that attachment of butyryl acyl intermediate to ACP alters the conformation of ACP. This finding supports the more general notion that the attachment of different acyl intermediates alters the ACP structure to facilitate their recognition and turnover by the appropriate target enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Streptolydigin, a secondary metabolite produced by Streptomyces lydicus, is a potent inhibitor of bacterial RNA polymerases. It has been suggested that streptolydigin biosynthesis is associated with polyketide synthase (PKS) and nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS). Thus, there is great interest in understanding the role of fatty acid biosynthesis in the biosynthesis of streptolydigin. In this paper, we cloned a type II fatty acid synthase (FAS II) gene cluster of fabDHCF from the genome of S. lydicus and constructed the SlyfabCF-disrupted mutant. Sequence analysis showed that SlyfabDHCF is 3.7 kb in length and encodes four separated proteins with conserved motifs and active residues, as shown in the FAS II of other bacteria. The SlyfabCF disruption inhibited streptolydigin biosynthesis and retarded mycelial growth, which were likely caused by the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis. Streptolydigin was not detected in the culture of the mutant strain by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. Meanwhile, the streptolol moiety of streptolydigin accumulated in cultures. As encoded by fabCF, acyl carrier protein (ACP) and β-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II are required for streptolydigin biosynthesis and likely involved in the step between PKS and NRPS. Our results provide the first genetic and metabolic evidence that SlyfabCF is shared by fatty acid synthesis and antibiotic streptolydigin synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
A proteinacious inhibitor of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet)-dependent transmethylation reactions was purified to homogeneity from porcine liver by size exclusion chromatography and FPLC. The molecular weight of the inhibitor was 12,222 Da. A 7400 Da polypeptide fragment of the purified inhibitor was sequenced by matrix-associated laser desorption ionization; time-of-flight MS, and was found to be identical with the known sequence of spinach acyl carrier protein (ACP). Although the remainder of the molecule was not clearly defined, 1H and H-H correlation of spectroscopy (COSY) NMR analysis revealed the presence of an oligosaccharide with alpha-glycosidic linkage. The purified oligosaccharide-linked ACP inhibited several AdoMet-dependent transmethylation reactions such as protein methylase I and II. S-farnesylcysteine O-methyltransferase, DNA methyltransferase and phospholipid methyltransferase. Protein methylase II was inhibited with a Ki value of 2.4 x 10(-3) M in a mixed inhibition pattern, whereas a well-known competitive product inhibitor S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) had Ki value of 6.3 x 10(-6) M. Commercially available active ACP fragments (65-74) and ACP from Escherichia coli had less inhibitory activity toward S-farnesylcysteine O-methyltransferase than the purified inhibitor. The biological significance of this oligosaccharide-linked ACP which has two seemingly unrelated functions (inhibitor for transmethylation and fatty acid biosynthesis) remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

20.
J. Browse  C. R. Slack 《Planta》1985,166(1):74-80
Plastids isolated from maturing, nongreen safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) cotyledons yielded unesterified fatty acids as the predominant product of fatty-acid synthesis from [1-14C]acetate. Exogenous reduced pyridine nucleotides were not required for this synthesis, but [1-14C]acetate incorporation was absolutely dependent on addition of ATP. Linseed (Linum usitatissimum L.) cotyledons are green during development and plastids isolated from them resembled leaf chloroplasts with developed grana. In contrast to the safflower plastids, those from linseed were able to carry out fatty-acid synthesis at low irradiances without the addition of either pyridine nucleotides or ATP. Intact linseed cotyledons were capable of net photosynthesis at rates up to 95 mol·mg-1 chlorophyll·h-1. However, the low-light environment inside the linseed capsule (approx. 15% of external) means that photosynthesis will not contribute appreciably to the carbon economy of the developing seed and its main role may be to supply cofactors for fatty-acid synthesis.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - PC phosphatidylcholine - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - UFA unesterified fatty acids  相似文献   

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