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1.
2.
Hepatic mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) properties, beta-oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA and membrane polarization were measured in lean and obese Zucker rats. The Vmax. of the 'outer' carnitine palmitoyltransferase ('CPT-A') increased with starvation, with no change in the Km for either carnitine or palmitoyl-CoA. The Ki for malonyl-CoA increased with starvation in lean rats, but not in obese rats. The Vmax. of the 'inner' enzyme ('CPT-B'), as measured by using inverted submitochondrial vesicles, increased with starvation in obese rats only, with no change in the Km for either carnitine or palmitoyl-CoA. The Ki for malonyl-CoA was 2-5-fold higher in inverted vesicles than in intact mitochondria, and showed no alteration with starvation. The activities of both enzymes correlated positively with each other and with beta-oxidation, and inversely with membrane polarization. Malonyl-CoA had little effect on gross membrane fluidity in the Zucker rat, as reflected by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence polarization. The results indicate that both enzymes are related and respond similarly to alterations in membrane fluidity. Membrane fluidity may provide a mechanism for co-ordinated control of CPT activity on both sides of the mitochondrial inner membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Intact mitochondria and inverted submitochondrial vesicles were prepared from the liver of fed, starved (48 h) and streptozotocin-diabetic rats in order to characterize carnitine palmitoyltransferase kinetics and malonyl-CoA sensitivity in situ. In intact mitochondria, both starved and diabetic rats exhibited increased Vmax., increased Km for palmitoyl-CoA, and decreased sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition. Inverted submitochondrial vesicles also showed increased Vmax. with starvation and diabetes, with no change in Km for either palmitoyl-CoA or carnitine. Inverted vesicles were uniformly less sensitive to malonyl-CoA regardless of treatment, and diabetes resulted in a further decrease in sensitivity. In part, differences in the response of carnitine palmitoyltransferase to starvation and diabetes may reside in differences in the membrane environment, as observed with Arrhenius plots, and the relation of enzyme activity and membrane fluidity. In all cases, whether rats were fed, starved or diabetic, and whether intact or inverted vesicles were examined, increasing membrane fluidity was associated with increasing activity. Malonyl-CoA was found to produce a decrease in intact mitochondrial membrane fluidity in the fed state, particularly at pH 7.0 or less. No effect was observed in intact mitochondria from starved or diabetic rats, or in inverted vesicles from any of the treatment groups. Through its effect on membrane fluidity, malonyl-CoA could regulate carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity on both surfaces of the inner membrane through an interaction with only the outer surface.  相似文献   

4.
1. Hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity was measured over a range of concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA and in the presence of several concentrations of the inhibitor malonyl-CoA. These measurements were made in mitochondria obtained from the livers of fed and starved (24 h) virgin female and fed and starved pregnant rats. 2. In the fed state overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity was significantly lower in virgin females than in age-matched male rats. 3. Starvation increased overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity in both virgin and pregnant females. This increase was larger than in the male and was greater in pregnant than in virgin females. 4. In the fed state pregnancy had no effect on the Hill coefficient or the [S]0.5 when palmitoyl-CoA was varied as substrate. Pregnancy did not alter the sensitivity of the enzyme to inhibition by malonyl-CoA. 5. Starvation decreased the sensitivity of the enzyme to malonyl-CoA. The change in sensitivity was similar in male, virgin female and pregnant rats. 6. The possible relevance of these findings to known sex differences and changes with pregnancy in hepatic fatty acid oxidation and esterification are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The outer mitochondrial membrane enzyme carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPTI) catalyzes the initial and regulatory step in the beta-oxidation of fatty acids. The genes for the two isoforms of CPTI-liver (L-CPTI) and muscle (M-CPTI) have been cloned and expressed, and the genes encode for enzymes with very different kinetic properties and sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition. Pig L-CPTI encodes for a 772 amino acid protein that shares 86 and 62% identity, respectively, with rat L- and M-CPTI. When expressed in Pichia pastoris, the pig L-CPTI enzyme shows kinetic characteristics (carnitine, K(m) = 126 microM; palmitoyl-CoA, K(m) = 35 microM) similar to human or rat L-CPTI. However, the pig enzyme, unlike the rat liver enzyme, shows a much higher sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition (IC(50) = 141 nM) that is characteristic of human or rat M-CPTI enzymes. Therefore, pig L-CPTI behaves like a natural chimera of the L- and M-CPTI isotypes, which makes it a useful model to study the structure--function relationships of the CPTI enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) of rat liver mitochondria is an integral, polytopic protein of the outer membrane that is enriched at contact sites. As CPT I kinetics are highly dependent on its membrane environment, we have measured the kinetic parameters of CPT I present in rat liver submitochondrial membrane fractions enriched in either outer membrane or contact sites. The K(m) for palmitoyl-CoA was 2.4-fold higher for CPT I in outer membranes than that for the enzyme in contact sites. In addition, whereas in contact sites malonyl-CoA behaved as a competitive inhibitor of CPT I with respect to palmitoyl-CoA, in outer membranes malonyl-CoA inhibition was non-competitive. As a result of the combination of these changes, the IC(50) for malonyl-CoA was severalfold higher for CPT I in contact sites than for the enzyme in bulk outer membrane. The K(i) for malonyl-CoA, the K(m) for carnitine, and the catalytic constant of the enzyme were all unaffected. It is concluded that the different membrane environments in outer membranes and contact sites result in an altered conformation of L-CPT I that specifically affects the long-chain acyl-CoA binding site. The accompanying changes in the kinetics of the enzyme provide an additional potent mechanism for the regulation of L-CPT I activity.  相似文献   

7.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-I) and II (CPT-II) enzymes are components of the carnitine palmitoyltransferase shuttle system which allows entry of long-chain fatty acids into the mitochondrial matrix for subsequent oxidation. This system is tightly regulated by malonyl-CoA levels since this metabolite is a strong reversible inhibitor of the CPT-I enzyme. There are two distinct CPT-I isotypes (CPT-Ialpha and CPT-Ibeta), that exhibit different sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition. Because of its ability to inhibit fatty acid synthase, C75 is able to increase malonyl-CoA intracellular levels. Paradoxically it also activates long-chain fatty acid oxidation. To identify the exact target of C75 within the CPT system, we expressed individually the different components of the system in the yeast Pichia pastoris. We show here that C75 acts on recombinant CPT-Ialpha, but also on the other CPT-I isotype (CPT-Ibeta) and the malonyl-CoA insensitive component of the CPT system, CPT-II.  相似文献   

8.
The requirement for carnitine and the malonyl-CoA sensitivity of carnitine palmitoyl-transferase I (EC 2.3.1.21) were measured in isolated mitochondria from eight tissues of animal or human origin using fixed concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA (50 microM) and albumin (147 microM). The Km for carnitine spanned a 20-fold range, rising from about 35 microM in adult rat and human foetal liver to 700 microM in dog heart. Intermediate values of increasing magnitude were found for rat heart, guinea pig liver and skeletal muscle of rat, dog and man. Conversely, the concentration of malonyl-CoA required for 50% suppression of enzyme activity fell from the region of 2-3 microM in human and rat liver to only 20 nM in tissues displaying the highest Km for carnitine. Thus, the requirement for carnitine and sensitivity to malonyl-CoA appeared to be inversely related. The Km of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I for palmitoyl-CoA was similar in tissues showing large differences in requirement for carnitine. Other experiments established that, in addition to liver, heart and skeletal muscle of fed rats contain significant quantities of malonyl-CoA and that in all three tissues the level falls with starvation. Although its intracellular location in heart and skeletal muscle is not known, the possibility is raised that malonyl-CoA (or a related compound) could, under certain circumstances, interact with carnitine palmitoyltransferase I in non-hepatic tissues and thereby exert control over long chain fatty acid oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase and carnitine octanoyltransferase activities in brain mitochondrial fractions were approx. 3-4-fold lower than activities in liver. Estimated Km values of CPT1 and CPT2 (the overt and latent forms respectively of carnitine palmitoyltransferase) for L-carnitine were 80 microM and 326 microM, respectively, and K0.5 values for palmitoyl-CoA were 18.5 microM and 12 microM respectively. CPT1 activity was strongly inhibited by malonyl-CoA, with I50 values (concn. giving 50% of maximum inhibition) of approx. 1.5 microM. In the absence of other ligands, [2-14C]malonyl-CoA bound to intact brain mitochondria in a manner consistent with the presence of two independent classes of binding sites. Estimated values for KD(1), KD(2), N1 and N2 were 18 nM, 27 microM, 1.3 pmol/mg of protein and 168 pmol/mg of protein respectively. Neither CPT1 activity, nor its sensitivity towards malonyl-CoA, was affected by 72 h starvation. Rates of oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA (in the presence of L-carnitine) or of palmitoylcarnitine by non-synaptic mitochondria were extremely low, indicating that neither CPT1 nor CPT2 was likely to be rate-limiting for beta-oxidation in brain. CPT1 activity relative to mitochondrial protein increased slightly from birth to weaning (20 days) and thereafter decreased by approx. 50%.  相似文献   

10.
1. Hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity was measured over a range of concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA and in the presence of several concentrations of the inhibitor malonyl-CoA. These measurements were made in mitochondria obtained from the livers of fed and starved (24 h) normal rats and of fed and starved thyroidectomized rats. 2. In the fed state thyroidectomy substantially decreased overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity and also decreased both the Hill coefficient and the s0.5 when palmitoyl-CoA concentration was varied as substrate. Thyroidectomy did not appreciably alter the inhibitory effect of malonyl-CoA on the enzyme. 3. Starvation increased overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity in both the fed and the thyroidectomized state. In percentage terms this response to starvation was substantially greater after thyroidectomy. In both the hypothyroid and normal states starvation decreased sensitivity to inhibition by malonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

11.
Hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I (CPT-IL) isolated from mitochondrial outer membranes obtained in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors is readily recognized by phosphoamino acid antibodies. Mass spectrometric analysis of CPT-IL tryptic digests revealed the presence of three phosphopeptides including one with a protein kinase CKII (CKII) consensus site. Incubation of dephosphorylated outer membranes with protein kinases and [gamma-32P]ATP resulted in radiolabeling of CPT-I only by CKII. Using mass spectrometry, only one region of phosphorylation was detected in CPT-I isolated from CKII-treated mitochondria. The sequence of the peptide and position of phosphorylated amino acids have been determined unequivocally as FpSSPETDpSHRFGK (residues 740-752). Furthermore, incubation of dephosphorylated outer membranes with CKII and unlabeled ATP led to increased catalytic activity and rendered malonyl-CoA inhibition of CPT-I from competitive to uncompetitive. These observations identify a new mechanism for regulation of hepatic CPT-I by phosphorylation.  相似文献   

12.
Malonyl-CoA significantly increased the Km for L-carnitine of overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase in liver mitochondria from fed rats. This effect was observed when the molar palmitoyl-CoA/albumin concentration ratio was low (0.125-1.0), but not when it was higher (2.0). In the absence of malonyl-CoA, the Km for L-carnitine increased with increasing palmitoyl-CoA/albumin ratios. Malonyl-CoA did not increase the Km for L-carnitine in liver mitochondria from 24h-starved rats or in heart mitochondria from fed animals. The Km for L-carnitine of the latent form of carnitine palmitoyltransferase was 3-4 times that for the overt form of the enzyme. At low ratios of palmitoyl-CoA/albumin (0.5), the concentration of malonyl-CoA causing a 50% inhibition of overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity was decreased by 30% when assays with liver mitochondria from fed rats were performed at 100 microM-instead of 400 microM-carnitine. Such a decrease was not observed with liver mitochondria from starved animals. L-Carnitine displaced [14C]malonyl-CoA from liver mitochondrial binding sites. D-Carnitine was without effect. L-Carnitine did not displace [14C]malonyl-CoA from heart mitochondria. It is concluded that, under appropriate conditions, malonyl-CoA may decrease the effectiveness of L-carnitine as a substrate for the enzyme and that L-carnitine may decrease the effectiveness of malonyl-CoA to regulate the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The metabolic and genic effects induced by a 20-fold lowering of carnitine content in the heart were studied in mildronate-treated rats. In the perfused heart, the proportion of palmitate taken up then oxidized was 5-10% lower, while the triacylglycerol (TAG) formation was 100% greater than in controls. The treatment was shown to increase the maximal capacity of heart homogenates to oxidize palmitate, the mRNA level of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-I) isoforms, the specific activity of CPT-I in subsarcolemmal mitochondria and the total carnitine content of isolated mitochondria. Concomitantly, the increased mRNA expression of lipoprotein lipase, fatty acid translocase and enzymes of TAG synthesis was associated with a 5- and 2-times increase in serum TAG and free fatty acid contents, respectively. The compartmentation of carnitine at its main functional location was expected to allow the increased CPT-I activity to ensure in vivo correct fatty acid oxidation rates. All the inductions related to fatty acid transport, oxidation and esterification most likely stem from the abundance of blood lipids providing cardiomyocytes with more fatty acids.  相似文献   

14.
The experiments reconfirm the powerful inhibitory effect of malonyl-CoA on carnitine acyltransferase I and fatty acid oxidation in rat liver mitochondria (Ki 1.5 microM). Sensitivity decreased with starvation (Ki after 18 h starvation 3.0 microM, and after 42 h 5.0 microM). Observations by Cook, Otto & Cornell [Biochem. J. (1980) 192, 955--958] and Ontko & Johns [Biochem. J. (1980) 192, 959--962] have cast doubt on the physiological role of malonyl-CoA in the regulation of hepatic fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis. The high Ki values obtained in the cited studies are shown to be due to incubation conditions that cause substrate depletion, destruction of malonyl-CoA or generation of excessively high concentrations of unbound acyl-CoA (which offsets the competitive inhibition of malonyl-CoA towards carnitine acyltransferase I). The present results are entirely consistent with the postulated role of malonyl-CoA as the primary regulatory of fatty acid synthesis and oxidation in rat liver.  相似文献   

15.
16.
A suckling piglet model was used to study nutritional and pharmacologic means of stimulating hepatic fatty acid beta-oxidation. Newborn pigs were fed milk diets containing either long- or medium-chain triglycerides (LCT or MCT). The long-chain control diet was supplemented further with clofibric acid (0.5%) or isoproterenol (40 ppm), and growth was monitored for 10-12 days. Clofibrate increased rates of hepatic peroxisomal and mitochondrial beta-oxidation of [1-(14)C]-palmitate by 60 and 186%, respectively. Furthermore, malonyl-CoA sensitive carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I) activity increased 64% (P < 0.05) in pigs receiving clofibrate. Increased CPT I activity was not congruent with changes in message, as elevated abundance of CPT I mRNA was not detected (P = 0.16) when assessed by qRT-PCR. Neither rates of beta-oxidation nor CPT activities were affected by dietary MCT or by isoproterenol treatment (P > 0.1). Collectively, these findings indicate that clofibrate effectively induced hepatic CPT activity concomitant with increased fatty acid beta-oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of this study was to investigate early biochemical changes and possible mechanisms via which alkyl(C12)thioacetic acid (CMTTD, blocked for beta-oxidation), alkyl(C12)thiopropionic acid (CETTD, undergo one cycle of beta-oxidation) and a 3-thiadicarboxylic acid (BCMTD, blocked for both omega- (and beta-oxidation) influence the peroxisomal beta-oxidation in liver of rats. Treatment of rats with CMTTD caused a stimulation of the palmitoyl-CoA synthetase activity accompanied with increased concentration of hepatic acid-insoluble CoA. This effect was already established during 12-24 h of feeding. From 2 days of feeding, the cellular level of acid-insoluble CoA began to decrease, whereas free CoASH content increased. Stimulation of [1-14C]palmitoyl-CoA oxidation in the presence of KCN, palmitoyl-CoA-dependent dehydrogenase (termed peroxisomal beta-oxidation) and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activities were revealed after 36-48 h of CMTTD-feeding. Administration of BCMTD affected the enzymatic activities and altered the distribution of CoA between acid-insoluble and free forms comparable to what was observed in CMTTD-treated rats. It is evident that treatment of peroxisome proliferators (BCMTD and CMTTD), the level of acyl-CoA esters and the enzyme activity involved in their formation precede the increase in peroxisomal and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activities. In CMTTD-fed animals the activity of cyanide-insensitive fatty acid oxidation remained unchanged when the mitochondrial beta-oxidation and carnitine palmitoyltransferase operated at maximum rates. The sequence and redistribution of CoA and enzyme changes were interpreted as support for the hypothesis that substrate supply is an important factor in the regulation of peroxisomal fatty acid metabolism, i.e., the fatty acyl-CoA species appear to be catabolized by peroxisomes at high rates only when uptake into mitochondria is saturated. Administration of CETTD led to an inhibition of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation accompanied with a rise in the concentration of acyl-CoA esters in the liver. Consequently, fatty liver developed. The peroxisomal beta-oxidation was marginally affected. Whether inhibition of mitochondrial beta-oxidation may be involved in regulation of peroxisomal fatty acid metabolism and in development of fatty liver should be considered.  相似文献   

18.
1. The CoA and carnitine esters of 2-bromopalmitate are extremely powerful and specific inhibitors of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. 2. 2-Bromopalmitoyl-CoA, added as such or formed from 2-bromopalmitate, inhibits the carnitine-dependent oxidation of palmitate or palmitoyl-CoA, but not the oxidation of palmitoylcarnitine, by intact liver mitochondria. 3. 2-Bromopalmitoylcarnitine inhibits the oxidation of palmitoylcarnitine as well as that of palmitate or palmitoyl-CoA. It has no effect on succinate oxidation, but inhibits that of pyruvate, 2-oxoglutarate or hexanoate; however, the oxidation of these substrates (but not of palmitate, palmitoyl-CoA or palmitoyl-carnitine) is restored by carnitine. 4. In damaged mitochondria, added 2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA does inhibit palmitoylcarnitine oxidation; pyruvate oxidation is unaffected by the inhibitor alone, but is impaired if palmitoylcarnitine is subsequently added. 5. The findings have been interpreted as follows. 2-Bromopalmitoyl-CoA inactivates (in a carnitine-dependent manner) a pool of carnitine palmitoyltransferase which is accessible to external acyl-CoA. This results in inhibition of palmitate or palmitoyl-CoA oxidation. A second pool of carnitine palmitoyltransferase, inaccessible to added acyl-CoA in intact mitochondria, can generate bromopalmitoyl-CoA within the matrix from external 2-bromopalmitoylcarnitine; this reaction is reversible. Such internal 2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA inactivates long-chain beta-oxidation (as does added 2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA if the mitochondria are damaged) and its formation also sequesters intramitochondrial CoA. Since this CoA is shared by pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenases, the oxidation of their substrates is depressed by 2-bromopalmitoylcarnitine, unless free carnitine is available to act as a ;sink' for long-chain acyl groups. 6. These effects are compared with those reported for other inhibitors of fatty acid oxidation.  相似文献   

19.
The carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity of various subcellular preparations measured with octanoyl-CoA as substrate was markedly increased by bovine serum albumin at low M concentrations of octanoyl-CoA. However, even a large excess (500 M) of this acyl-CoA did not inhibit the activity of the mitochondrial outer carnitine palmitoyltransferase, a carnitine palmitoyltransferase isoform that is particularly sensitive to inhibition by low M concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA. This bovine serum albumin stimulation was independent of the salt activation of the carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity. The effects of acyl-CoA binding protein (ACBP) and the fatty acid binding protein were also examined with palmitoyl-CoA as substrate. The results were in line with the findings of stronger binding of acyl-CoA to ACBP but showed that fatty acid binding protein also binds acyl-CoA esters. Although the effects of these proteins on the outer mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity and its malonyl-CoA inhibition varied with the experimental conditions, they showed that the various carnitine palmitoyltransferase preparations are effectively able to use palmitoyl-CoA bound to ACBP in a near physiological molar ratio of 1:1 as well as that bound to the fatty acid binding protein. It is suggested that the three proteins mentioned above effect the carnitine palmitoyltransferase activities not only by binding of acyl-CoAs, preventing acyl-CoA inhibition, but also by facilitating the removal of the acylcarnitine product from carnitine palmitoyltransferase. These results support the possibility that the acyl-CoA binding ability of acyl-CoA binding protein and of fatty acid binding protein have a role in acyl-CoA metabolismin vivo.Abbreviations ACBP acyl-CoA binding protein - BSA bovine serum albumin - CPT carnitine palmitoyltransferase - CPT0 malonyl-CoA sensitive CPT of the outer mitochondrial membrane - CPT malonyl-CoA insensitive CPT of the inner mitochondrial membrane - OG octylglucoside - OMV outer membrane vesicles - IMV inner membrane vesicles Affiliated to the Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Montreal  相似文献   

20.
Little is known about the sources of acetyl-CoA used for the synthesis of malonyl-CoA, a key regulator of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in the heart. In perfused rat hearts, we previously showed that malonyl-CoA is labeled from both carbohydrates and fatty acids. This study was aimed at assessing the mechanisms of incorporation of fatty acid carbons into malonyl-CoA. Rat hearts were perfused with glucose, lactate, pyruvate, and a fatty acid (palmitate, oleate or docosanoate). In each experiment, substrates were (13)C-labeled to yield singly or/and doubly labeled acetyl-CoA. The mass isotopomer distribution of malonyl-CoA was compared with that of the acetyl moiety of citrate, which reflects mitochondrial acetyl-CoA. In the presence of labeled glucose or lactate/pyruvate, the (13)C labeling of malonyl-CoA was up to 2-fold lower than that of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA. However, in the presence of a fatty acid labeled in its first acetyl moiety, the (13)C labeling of malonyl-CoA was up to 10-fold higher than that of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA. The labeling of malonyl-CoA and of the acetyl moiety of citrate is compatible with peroxisomal beta-oxidation forming C(12) and C(14) acyl-CoAs and contributing >50% of the fatty acid-derived acetyl groups that end up in malonyl-CoA. This fraction increases with the fatty acid chain length. By supplying acetyl-CoA for malonyl-CoA synthesis, peroxisomal beta-oxidation may participate in the control of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in the heart. In addition, this pathway may supply some acyl groups used in protein acylation, which is increasingly recognized as an important regulatory mechanism for many biochemical processes.  相似文献   

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