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1.
Chick liver cell monolayers synthesize fatty acids at in vivo rates and are responsive to insulin and glucagon. High rates of fatty acid synthesis are maintained with insulin present and lost slowly without insulin. Glucagon or 3',5'-cyclic AMP cause immediate cessation of fatty acid synthesis. The site of inhibition appears to be cytoplasmic acetyl-CoA carboxylase which catalyzes the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis. Liver carboxylase exists either as catalytically inactive protomers or active filamentous polymers. Citrate, an allosteric activator of the enzyme, is required for both catalysis and polymerization. Glucagon and cAMP cause an immediate decrease in the cytoplasmic citrate concentration of chick liver cells apparently by inhibiting the conversion of glucose to citrate at the phosphofructokinase reaction. Since fatty acid synthesis and citrate level are closely correlated, citrate appears to be a feed-forward activator of the carboxylase in vivo. Compelling evidence indicates that carboxylase filaments are present in the intact cell when citrate levels are high and depolymerize when citrate levels fall. Hence, carboxylase activity and fatty acid synthetic rate appear to be determined by cytoplasmic citrate level.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of citrate and cyclic AMP on the rate and degree of phosphorylation and inactivation of rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase were examined. High citrate concentrations (10 to 20 mM), which are generally used to stabilize and activate the enzyme, inhibit phosphorylation and inactivation of carboxylase. At lower concentrations of citrate, the rate and degree of phosphorylation are increased. Furthermore, phosphorylation and enzyme inactivation are affected by cyclic AMP under these conditions. At high citrate concentrations, cyclic AMP has little or no effect on inactivation and phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. Phosphorlation and inactivation of carboxylase is accompanied by depolymerization of the polymeric form of the enzyme into intermediate and protomeric forms. Depolymerization of carboxylase requires the transfer of the gamma-phosphate group from ATP to carboxylase. Inactivation occurs in the absence of CO2, which indicates that phosphorylation of the enzyme is the cause of inactivation and depolymerization, i.e. carboxylation of the enzyme is not responsible for inactivation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The polymerization of acetyl-CoA carboxylase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Citrate, an allosteric activator of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, induces polymerization of an inactive protomeric form of the enzyme into an active filamentous form composed of 10-20 protomers. The light-scattering properties of the carboxylase were used to study the kinetics of its polymerization and depolymerization. From stopped flow kinetic studies, we have established that polymerization is a second order process, with a second order rate constant of 597,000 M-1 s-1. There appear to be two steps which limit polymerization of the inactive carboxylase protomer: 1) a rapid citrate-induced conformational change which is independent of enzyme concentration and leads to an active protomeric form of the enzyme (Beaty, N. B., and Lane, M. D. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 13043-13050, preceding paper) and 2) the dimerization of the active protomer, which constitutes the first step of polymerization and is enzyme concentration-dependent. Dimerization is the rate-limiting step of acetyl-CoA carboxylase polymerization. Depolymerization of fully polymerized acetyl-CoA carboxylase is caused by malonyl-CoA, ATP X Mg, and Mg2+. Both malonyl-CoA and ATP X Mg (and HCO-3) compete with citrate in the maintenance of a given state of the protomer-polymer equilibrium apparently by carboxylating the enzyme to form enzyme-biotin-CO-2 which destablizes the polymeric form. Free citrate is the species responsible for polymerizing the enzyme and Mg2+ causes depolymerization of the enzyme by lowering the concentration of free citrate.  相似文献   

4.
If acetyl-CoA carboxylase in epididymal fat tissue is subject to control by convalent modification as in the case of the liver enzyme, catalytically different forms of carboxylase should exist, independent of polymerization. By treating epididymal fat tissue in culture with epinephrine, we have demonstrated catalytically less active forms of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. The catalytically less active forms of the enzyme reacted to antibody with the same efficiency as the active form of carboxylase. However, the less active enzyme formed by epinephrine treatment of tissues has a sedimentation constant of 30 to 35 S, whereas that of the enzyme from control tissue is 45 S. Incubation of the less active forms of the carboxylase with 10 mM citrate and up to 10 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin activated the enzyme without any change in the sedimentation constant. Therefore, the less active forms of the carboxylase formed as a result of epinephrine treatment are not due to the depolymerization of polymeric forms (45 S) to the protomeric forms (17 to 20 S), but to the formation of intermediate species of carboxylase which cannot form polymeric enzyme (45 S) in the presence of high concentrations of citrate.  相似文献   

5.
1. Exposure of rat epididymal fat-pads or isolated fat-cells to adrenaline results in a decrease in acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity measured both in initial extracts and in extracts incubated with potassium citrate; in addition the concentration of citrate required to give half-maximal activation may also be increased. 2. Incorporation of 32Pi into acetyl-CoA carboxylase within intact fat-cells was investigated and evidence is presented that adrenaline increases the extent of phosphorylation of the enzyme. 3. Dephosphorylation of 32P-labelled acetyl-CoA carboxylase was studied in cell extracts. The rate of release of 32P is increased by 5mM-MgCl2 plus 10--100 microM-Ca2+, whereas it is inhibited by the presence of bivalent metal ion chelators such as EDTA and citrate. 4. The effects of adrenaline on the kinetic properties of acetyl-CoA carboxylase disappear if pad or cell extracts are treated with Mg2+ and Ca2+ under conditions that also lead to dephosphorylation of the enzyme. 5. The results of this study represent convincing evidence that adrenaline inactivates acetyl-CoA carboxylase in adipose-tissue preparations by increasing the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Superose 6 chromatography was used to separate rapidly the polymeric and dimeric forms of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. With preparations of acetyl-CoA carboxylase purified by Sepharose-avidin chromatography, it is shown that citrate promotes polymerization and that the extent of polymerization is diminished, but not eliminated, after phosphorylation by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. After exposure of rat epididymal adipose tissue to insulin, evidence was obtained for a marked increase in polymerization. The polymeric form, which was active in the absence of citrate, exhibited increased phosphorylation, particularly on a tryptic peptide designated the I-peptide in an earlier study [Brownsey & Denton (1982) Biochem. J. 202, 77-86]. In contrast, in tissue exposed to the beta-agonist isoprenaline, most of the phosphorylated acetyl-CoA carboxylase appeared to be in the dimeric form if chromatography was carried out in the absence of citrate, whereas in the presence of citrate the degree of polymerization was diminished.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of gamma-actinin and actin was investigated under various conditions. It has been shown that gamma-actinin affects the G-F transformation of actin, causing an increase in the number of actin monomers required to form a nucleus in the initial step of polymerization. Sonicated fragments of F-actin and heavy meromyosin caused the immediate polymerization of actin under the influence of gamma-actinin. Therefore, it can be concluded that gamma-actinin inhibits the nucleation step of G-F transformation. Actin filaments which were formed in the presence of gamma-actinin (F-actin) were shown to possess certain characteristic properties when compared with control F-actin. These were as follows: F-actin solution had a high critical concentration; F-actin showed a high rate of depolymerization; the flow birefringence of F-actin decreased with time upon incubation in the absence of free ATP; finally, F-actin was demonstrated to have ATP-splitting activity. These dynamic features of F-actin were accounted for in terms of an increase in the rate constant of depolymerization in F-actin under the influence of gamma-actinin.  相似文献   

8.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the biogenesis of long-chain fatty acids, is regulated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. The major phosphorylation sites that affect carboxylase activity and the specific protein kinases responsible for phosphorylation of different sites have been identified. A form of acetyl-CoA carboxylase that is independent of citrate for activity occurs in vivo. This active form of carboxylase becomes citrate-dependent upon phosphorylation under conditions of reduced lipogenesis. Therefore, phosphorylation-dephosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase is the enzyme's primary short-term regulatory mechanism; this control mechanism together with cellular metabolites such as CoA, citrate, and palmitoyl-CoA serves to fine-tune the synthesis of long-chain fatty acids under different physiological conditions.  相似文献   

9.
The activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, measured in various ways, was studied in 15000g extracts of rat liver hepatocytes and compared with the rate of fatty acid synthesis in intact hepatocytes incubated with insulin or glucagon. Hepatocyte extracts were prepared by disruption of cells with a Dounce homogenizer or by solubilization with 1.5% (v/v) Triton X-100. Sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation demonstrated that the sedimentation coefficient of acetyl-CoA carboxylase from cell extracts was 30-35S, regardless of the conditions of incubation or disruption of hepatocytes. Solubilization of cells with 1.5% Triton X-100 yielded twice as much enzyme activity (measured by [14C]bicarbonate fixation) in the sucrose-gradient fractions as did cell disruption by the Dounce homogenizer. Analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography of acetyl-CoA carboxylase reaction mixtures showed that [14C]malonyl-CoA accounted for 10-60% of the total acid-stable radioactivity, depending on the method for disrupting hepatocytes and on the preincubation of the 15000g extract, with or without citrate, before assay. Under conditions in which incubation of cells with insulin or glucagon caused an activation or inhibition, respectively, of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, only 25% of the acid-stable radioactivity was [14C]malonyl-CoA and enzyme activity was only 13% (control), 16% (insulin), and 57% (glucagon) of the rate of fatty acid synthesis. Under conditions when up to 60% of the acid-stable radioactivity was [14C]malonyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was comparable with the rate of fatty acid synthesis, there was no effect of insulin or glucagon on enzyme activity.  相似文献   

10.
The role of biotin-dependent enzymes in the fatty liver and kidney syndrome of young chicks was studied. Under conditions of a marginal deficiency of dietary biotin, the level of biotin in the liver has differing effects on the activities of two biotin-dependent enzymes, pyruvate carboxylase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase. The activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase is increased, but when the dietary deficiency of biotin produces biotin levels which are below 0-8 mug/g of liver, the activity of pyruvate carboxylase may be insufficient to completely metabolize pyruvate via gluconeogenesis. There is an increase in liver size and in the activities of enzymes involved in alternate pathways for the removal of pyruvate. Blood lactate accumulates and there is increased synthesis of fatty acids, and an accumulation of palmitoleic acid; these steps are accomplished by increased activities of at least the following enzymes: acetyl-CoA carboxylase, malate dehydrogenase (decarboxylating) (NADP+) and the desaturase enzyme. When the biotin level is below 0-35 mug/g of liver and the chick is subjected to a stress, physiological defence mechanisms of the chick may be inadequate to maintain homeostasis and they finally collapse, resulting in accumulation of triacylglycerol in the liver and blood; the chick is unable to maintain blood glucose levels and death occurs, often only a few hours after the imposition of the stress.  相似文献   

11.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase was isolated from rat liver by polyethylene glycol precipitation and avidin affinity chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis of the enzyme gives one protein band (Mr 250,000). Phosphate analysis of the carboxylase showed the presence of 8.3 mol of phosphate/mol of subunit (Mr 250,000). The purified carboxylase has low activity in the absence of citrate (specific activity = 0.3 units/mg). However, addition of 10 mM citrate activates the carboxylase 10-fold, with half-maximal activation observed at 2 mM citrate, well above the physiological citrate level. Using this carboxylase as a substrate, we have isolated from rat liver a protein that activates the enzyme about 10-fold. This protein has been purified to near homogeneity (Mr 90,000). Incubation of this protein with 32P-labeled acetyl-CoA carboxylase results in a time-dependent activation of carboxylase with concomitant release of 32Pi, indicating that this protein is a phosphoprotein phosphatase. Both activation and dephosphorylation are dependent on Mn2+, but not citrate. This phosphatase does not hydrolyze p-nitrophenyl phosphate but does show high affinity for acetyl-CoA carboxylase (Km = 0.2 microM) as compared to its action on phosphorylase a (Km = 5.5 microM) and phosphohistone (Km = 20 microM). Activated acetyl-CoA carboxylase was isolated after dephosphorylation by the phosphatase. Such preparations contain about 5 mol of phosphate/mol of subunit and have specific activities of 2.6-3.0 units/mg in the absence of citrate. These activities are comparable to those of the phosphorylated carboxylase in the presence of 10 mM citrate. Thus, dephosphorylation by the Mn2+-dependent phosphatase renders the carboxylase citrate-independent, as compared to the phosphorylated form, which is citrate-dependent. To our knowledge this is the first report of a preparation of animal acetyl-CoA carboxylase that has substantial catalytic activity independent of citrate.  相似文献   

12.
Role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylation in Acetobacter xylinum   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Glucose-grown cells of Acetobacter xylinum oxidized acetate only when the reaction mixture was supplemented with catalytic quantities of glucose or intermediates of the citrate cycle. Extracts, prepared by sonic treatment, catalyzed the formation of oxalacetate when incubated with phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and bicarbonate. Oxalacetate was not formed in the presence of pyruvate plus adenosine triphosphate. The ability to promote carboxylation of PEP was lower in succinate-grown cells than in glucose-grown cells. PEP carboxylase, partially purified from extracts by ammonium sulfate fractionation, catalyzed the stoichiometric formation of oxalacetate and inorganic phosphate from PEP and bicarbonate. The enzyme was not affected by acetyl-coenzyme A or inorganic phosphate. It was inhibited by adenosine diphosphate in a manner competitive with PEP (K(1) = 1.3 mm) and by dicarboxylic acids of the citrate cycle; of these, succinate was the most potent inhibitor. It is suggested that the physiological role of PEP carboxylase in A. xylinum is to affect the net formation of C(4) acids from C(3) precursors, which are essential for the maintainance of the citrate cycle during growth on glucose. The relationship of PEP carboxylase to other enzyme systems metabolizing PEP and oxalacetate in A. xylinum is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase isolated from freeze-clamped livers of fed rats has relatively low phosphate content (5.0 mol of Pi/mol of subunit) and high specific activity (3.5 units/mg in the absence of citrate). The enzyme from rats fasted for 12, 18, 24, and 48 h exhibited decreasing specific activities of 2.75, 1.85, 1.7, and 0.9 units/mg, respectively. Citrate activated all preparations of carboxylase, with most activation observed with the least active preparation. There was no significant change in the sensitivity of the enzyme to citrate since half-maximal activation was observed at 0.2 mM for carboxylase from fed as well as fasted rats. With the decrease in activity as a function of fasting, there was a concomitant increase in the phosphate content of carboxylase, with values of 5.3, 5.6, 6.7, and 7.6 mol of Pi/mol of subunit obtained for preparations from rats fasted for 12, 18, 24, and 48 h, respectively. Refeeding the fasted rats resulted in increased specific activity of carboxylase (3.4 units/mg) and decreased phosphate content (5.1 mol of Pi/mol of subunit). Moreover, dephosphorylation by [acetyl-CoA carboxylase]-phosphatase 2 activated the carboxylase from 48-h fasted rats to a value of 2.9 units/mg, assayed in the absence of citrate, indicating that the low activity of carboxylase from fasted rats was due to its increased phosphate content. Superose 6 chromatography showed that the enzyme exists in two polymeric forms, a highly active polymer of greater than or equal to 40 subunits and less active octamer. The former predominates in livers of fed rats, whereas the latter predominates in livers of fasted rats. The octamer could be converted to the highly active polymer by dephosphorylation. These observations indicate that fasting/refeeding results in phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase with concomitant depolymerization/polymerization of the protein and ultimately decreasing or increasing its specific activity.  相似文献   

14.
Biotin-binding antibodies were raised in rabbits by injecting biotin-bovine serum albumin conjugate. Neither the protomer nor the polymer of rat mammary-gland acetyl-CoA carboxylase formed precipitin bands with the anti-biotin. By virtue of its ability to bind biotin (apparent binding constant for free biotin about 1mum), the anti-biotin inhibited the carboxylase activity under certain conditions. This property of the antibody was employed to detect the ligand-induced changes affecting the biotinyl group in different conformational states of mammalian carboxylase. Depending on the ligand present, the biotinyl group in the protomeric form was either accessible or inaccessible to the antibody. The biotinyl group of the protomer generated by a relatively high concentration of NaCl (0.5m) reacted with the antibody, and the antibody-carboxylase complex could not be converted into active enzyme by citrate. Further experiments showed that citrate failed to induce polymerization in this protomer-antibody complex and that anti-biotin could be displaced rapidly from this complex with excess of biotin. The resulting protomer was converted into the polymeric state on citrate addition, with parallel regain of enzyme activity. In the presence of ADP+Mg(2+), ATP+Mg(2+) or ATP+Mg(2+)+HCO(3) (-), however, the enzyme remained as a protomer, but its configuration was such that the biotinyl group was essentially inaccessible to the antibody. Likewise, the biotinyl group of the different polymeric forms of the carboxylase (s approximately 30-45S) engendered by phosphate, malonyl-CoA, acetyl-CoA or citrate remained essentially inaccessible, since their activity was minimally affected by the anti-biotin. In the presence of 0.15m-NaCl, the phosphate-induced polymer reverted to a approximately 19S form with concomitant appearance of anti-biotin-sensitivity, whereas the other polymeric forms remained unaffected under similar experimental conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Harsh hakea (Hakea prostrata R.Br.) is a member of the Proteaceae family, which is highly represented on the extremely nutrient-impoverished soils in southwest Australia. When phosphorus is limiting, harsh hakea develops proteoid or cluster roots that release carboxylates that mobilize sparingly soluble phosphate in the rhizosphere. To investigate the physiology underlying the synthesis and exudation of carboxylates from cluster roots in Proteaceae, we measured O2 consumption, CO2 release, internal carboxylate concentrations and carboxylate exudation, and the abundance of the enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and alternative oxidase (AOX) over a 3-week time course of cluster-root development. Peak rates of citrate and malate exudation were observed from 12- to 13-d-old cluster roots, preceded by a reduction in cluster-root total protein levels and a reduced rate of O2 consumption. In harsh hakea, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase expression was relatively constant in cluster roots, regardless of developmental stage. During cluster-root maturation, however, the expression of AOX protein increased prior to the time when citrate and malate exudation peaked. This increase in AOX protein levels is presumably needed to allow a greater flow of electrons through the mitochondrial electron transport chain in the absence of rapid ATP turnover. Citrate and isocitrate synthesis and accumulation contributed in a major way to the subsequent burst of citrate and malate exudation. Phosphorus accumulated by harsh hakea cluster roots was remobilized during senescence as part of their efficient P cycling strategy for growth on nutrient impoverished soils.  相似文献   

16.
The actin cytoskeleton regulates exocytosis in all secretory cells. In neutrophils, Rac2 GTPase has been shown to control primary (azurophilic) granule exocytosis. In this report, we propose that Rac2 is required for actin cytoskeletal remodeling to promote primary granule exocytosis. Treatment of neutrophils with low doses (< or = 10 microM) of the actin-depolymerizing drugs latrunculin B (Lat B) or cytochalasin B (CB) enhanced both formyl peptide receptor- and Ca(2+) ionophore-stimulated exocytosis. Higher concentrations of CB or Lat B, or stabilization of F-actin with jasplakinolide (JP), inhibited primary granule exocytosis measured as myeloperoxidase release but did not affect secondary granule exocytosis determined by lactoferrin release. These results suggest an obligatory role for F-actin disassembly before primary granule exocytosis. However, lysates from secretagogue-stimulated neutrophils showed enhanced actin polymerization activity in vitro. Microscopic analysis showed that resting neutrophils contain significant cortical F-actin, which was redistributed to sites of primary granule translocation when stimulated. Exocytosis and actin remodeling was highly polarized when cells were primed with CB; however, polarization was reduced by Lat B preincubation, and both polarization and exocytosis were blocked when F-actin was stabilized with JP. Treatment of cells with the small molecule Rac inhibitor NSC23766 also inhibited actin remodeling and primary granule exocytosis induced by Lat B/fMLF or CB/fMLF, but not by Ca(2+) ionophore. Therefore, we propose a role for F-actin depolymerization at the cell cortex coupled with Rac-dependent F-actin polymerization in the cell cytoplasm to promote primary granule exocytosis.  相似文献   

17.
Formyl-met-leu-phe (fMLP) induces actin assembly in neutrophils; the resultant increase in F-actin content correlates with an increase in the rate of cellular locomotion at fMLP concentrations less than or equal to 10(-8) M (Howard, T.H., and W.H. Meyer, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 98:1265-1271). We studied the time course of change in F-actin content, F-actin distribution, and cell shape after fMLP stimulation. F-actin content was quantified by fluorescence activated cell sorter analysis of nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin-stained cells (Howard, T.H., 1982, J. Cell Biol., 95(2, Pt. 2:327a). F-actin distribution and cell shape were determined by analysis of fluorescence photomicrographs of nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin-stained cells. After fMLP stimulation at 25 degrees C, there is a rapid actin polymerization that is maximal (up to 2.0 times the control level) at 45 s; subsequently, the F-actin depolymerizes to an intermediate F-actin content 5-10 min after stimulation. The depolymerization of F-actin reflects a true decrease in F-actin content since the quantity of probe extractable from cells also decreases between 45 s and 10 min. The rate of actin polymerization (3.8 +/- 0.3-4.4 +/- 0.6% increase in F-actin/s) is the same for 10(-10) - 10(-6) M fMLP and the polymerization is inhibited by cytochalasin D. The initial rate of F-actin depolymerization (6.0 +/- 1.0-30 +/- 5% decrease in F-actin/min) is inversely proportional to fMLP dose. The F-actin content of stimulated cells at 45 s and 10 min is greater than control levels and varies directly with fMLP dose. F-actin distribution and cell shape also vary as a function of time after stimulation. 45 s after stimulation the cells are rounded and F-actin is diffusely distributed; 10 min after stimulation the cell is polarized and F-actin is focally distributed. These results indicate that actin polymerization and depolymerization follow fMLP stimulation in sequence, the rate of depolymerization and the maximum and steady state F-actin content but not the rate of polymerization are fMLP dose dependent, and concurrent with F-actin depolymerization, F-actin is redistributed and the cell changes shape.  相似文献   

18.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase catalyzes the first committed step in the synthesis of fatty acids. Because fatty acids are required during myelination in the developing brain, it was proposed that the level of acetyl-CoA carboxylase may be highest in embryonic brain. The presence of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was detected in chick embryo brain. Its activity varied with age, showing a peak in the 17-18-day-old embryo and decreasing thereafter. The enzyme, affinity-purified from 18-day-old chick embryo brain, appeared as a major protein band on polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (Mr 265,000), indistinguishable from the 265 kDa isozyme of liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase. It had significant activity (Sp act = 1.1 mumol/min per mg protein) in the absence of citrate. There was a maximum stimulation of only 25% in the presence of citrate. Dephosphorylation using [acetyl-CoA carboxylase] phosphatase 2 did not result in activation of the enzyme. Palmitoyl-CoA (0.1 mM) and malonyl-CoA (1 mM) inhibited the activity to 95% and 71%, respectively. Palmitoylcarnitine, however, did not show significant inhibition. The enzyme was inhibited (greater than 95%) by avidin; however, avidin did not show significant inhibition in the presence of excess biotin. The enzyme was also inhibited (greater than 90%) by antibodies against liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase. An immunoblot or avidin-blot detected only one protein band (Mr 265,000) in preparations from chick embryo brain or adult liver. These observations suggest that acetyl-CoA carboxylase is present in embryonic brain and that the enzyme appears to be similar to the 265 kDa isozyme of liver.  相似文献   

19.
1. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was measured in extracts of rat epididymal fat-pads either on preparation of the extracts (initial activity) or after incubation of the extracts with citrate (total activity). In the presence of glucose or fructose, brief exposure of pads to insulin increased the initial activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase; no increase occurred in the absence of substrate. Adrenaline in the presence of glucose and insulin decreased the initial activity. None of these treatments led to a substantial change in the total activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. A large decrease in the initial activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase also occurred with fat-pads obtained from rats that had been starved for 36h although the total activity was little changed by this treatment. 2. Conditions of high-speed centrifugation were found which appear to permit the separation of the polymeric and protomeric forms of the enzyme in fat-pad extracts. After the exposure of the fat-pads to insulin (in the presence of glucose), the proportion of the enzyme in the polymeric form was increased, whereas exposure to adrenaline (in the presence of glucose and insulin) led to a decrease in enzyme activity. 3. These changes are consistent with a role of citrate (as activator) or fatty acyl-CoA thioesters (as inhibitors) in the regulation of the enzyme by insulin and adrenaline; no evidence that the effects of these hormones involve phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of the enzyme could be found. 4. Changes in the whole tissue concentration of citrate and fatty acyl-CoA thioesters were compared with changes in the initial activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase under a variety of conditions of incubation. No correlation between the citrate concentration and the initial enzyme activity was evident under any condition studied. Except in fat-pads which were exposed to insulin there was little inverse correlation between the concentration in the tissue of fatty acyl-CoA thioesters and the initial activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. 5. It is suggested that changes in the concentration of free fatty acyl-CoA thioesters (which may not be reflected in whole tissue concentrations of these metabolites) may be important in the regulation of the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. The possibility is discussed that the concentration of free fatty acyl-CoA thioesters may be controlled by binding to a specific protein with properties similar to albumin.  相似文献   

20.
The subcellular distribution of actin in embryonic chick fibroblasts and brain was examined biochemically. Several gentle extraction procedures, which did not cause the breakdown of muscle filamentous actin, caused the release of large amounts of “cytoplasmic actin” in a monomeric form. This did not behave as a precursor or degradation product of filamentous actin in pulse label experiments and failed to form filaments under the same conditions as muscle actin. However, when it was purified and concentrated it was able to form aggregates which were very similar to paracrystals of muscle filamentous actin. These results suggest that cytoplasmic actin is at a higher concentration than muscle actin before it will polymerize, and that in the cell much of it is either monomeric or in a labile state.  相似文献   

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