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1.
Two different methods, stimulation of transport by fatty acyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and inhibition of transport by a nonhydrolyzable analogue of palmitoyl-CoA, reveal that fatty acylation is required to promote fusion of transport vesicles with Golgi cisternae. Specifically, fatty acyl-CoA is needed after the attachment of coated vesicles and subsequent uncoating of the vesicles, and after the binding of the NEM-sensitive fusion protein (NSF) to the membranes, but before the actual fusion event. We therefore suggest that an acylated transport component participates, directly or indirectly, in membrane fusion.  相似文献   

2.
Defatted liver fatty acid binding protein (FABP) reverses the inhibitory effect of palmitoyl-CoA on adenine nucleotide transport in rat liver mitochondria; addition of titrating amounts of FABP to mitochondria pretreated with palmitoyl-CoA stimulates nucleotide transport and that activation parallels the removal of the inhibitor from mitochondria. This effect is specific only for FABP; all other cytosolic proteins which do not bind fatty acids do not influence nucleotide transport activity. Addition of free fatty acids (which can compete for ligand binding sites on FABP) to mitochondria pretreated with palmitoyl-CoA interferes with the reversal activity of FABP. Adding FABP alone to freshly isolated mitochondria also activates nucleotide transport activity suggesting that the originally submaximal activity is probably due to the presence of endogenous long-chain acyl-CoA esters in the mitochondrial preparation. Because FABP is present in relatively high concentration in most mammalian cells, these observations offer a likely explanation of why the potent inhibitory effects of long-chain acyl-CoA esters on adenine nucleotide transport in isolated mitochondria are not seen in the intact cell.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Rates of peroxisomal beta-oxidation were measured as fatty acyl-CoA-dependent NAD+ reduction, by using solubilized peroxisomal fractions isolated from livers of rats treated with clofibrate. Medium- to long-chain saturated fatty acyl-CoA esters as well as long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acyl-CoA esters were used. Peroxisomal beta-oxidation shows optimal specificity towards long-chain polyunsaturated acyl-CoA esters. Eicosa-8,11,14-trienoyl-CoA, eicosa-11,14,17-trienoyl-CoA and docosa-7,10,13,16-tetraenoyl-CoA all gave Vmax. values of about 150% of that obtained with palmitoyl-CoA. The Km values obtained with these fatty acyl-CoA esters were 17 +/- 6, 13 +/- 4 and 22 +/- 3 microM respectively, which are in the same range as the value for palmitoyl-CoA (13.8 +/- 1 microM). Myristoyl-CoA gave the higher Vmax. (110% of the palmitoyl-CoA value) of the saturated fatty acyl-CoAs tested. Substrate inhibition was mostly observed with acyl-CoA esters giving Vmax. values higher than 50% of that given by palmitoyl-CoA.  相似文献   

5.
The enzyme phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1) catalyzes the first committed step of glycolysis and is regulated by a complex array of allosteric effectors that integrate glycolytic flux with cellular bioenergetics. Here, we demonstrate the direct, potent, and reversible inhibition of purified rabbit muscle PFK-1 by low micromolar concentrations of long chain fatty acyl-CoAs (apparent Ki~1 μM). In sharp contrast, short chain acyl-CoAs, palmitoylcarnitine, and palmitic acid in the presence of CoASH were without effect. Remarkably, MgAMP and MgADP but not MgATP protected PFK-1 against inhibition by palmitoyl-CoA indicating that acyl-CoAs regulate PFK-1 activity in concert with cellular high energy phosphate status. Furthermore, incubation of PFK-1 with [1-(14)C]palmitoyl-CoA resulted in robust acylation of the enzyme that was reversible by incubation with acyl-protein thioesterase-1 (APT1). Importantly, APT1 reversed palmitoyl-CoA-mediated inhibition of PFK-1 activity. Mass spectrometric analyses of palmitoylated PFK-1 revealed four sites of acylation, including Cys-114, Cys-170, Cys-351, and Cys-577. PFK-1 in both skeletal muscle extracts and in purified form was inhibited by S-hexadecyl-CoA, a nonhydrolyzable palmitoyl-CoA analog, demonstrating that covalent acylation of PFK-1 was not required for inhibition. Tryptic footprinting suggested that S-hexadecyl-CoA induced a conformational change in PFK-1. Both palmitoyl-CoA and S-hexadecyl-CoA increased the association of PFK-1 with Ca2+/calmodulin, which attenuated the binding of palmitoylated PFK-1 to membrane vesicles. Collectively, these results demonstrate that fatty acyl-CoA modulates phosphofructokinase activity through both covalent and noncovalent interactions to regulate glycolytic flux and enzyme membrane localization via the branch point metabolic node that mediates lipid flux through anabolic and catabolic pathways.  相似文献   

6.
Recent studies have suggested that parts of the hepatic activities of diacylglycerol acyltransferase and acyl cholesterol acyltransferase are expressed in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). However the ER membrane is impermeable to the long-chain fatty acyl-CoA substrates of these enzymes. Liver microsomal vesicles that were shown to be at least 95% impermeable to palmitoyl-CoA were used to demonstrate the membrane transport of palmitoylcarnitine and free L-carnitine - processes that are necessary for an indirect route of provision of ER luminal fatty acyl-CoA through a luminal carnitine acyltransferase (CAT). Experimental conditions and precautions were established to permit measurement of the transport of [14C]palmitoylcarnitine into microsomes through the use of the luminal CAT and acyl-CoA:ethanol acyltransferase as a reporter system to detect formation of luminal [14C]palmitoyl-CoA. Rapid, unidirectional transport of free L-[3H]carnitine by microsomes was measured directly. This process, mediated either by a channel or a carrier, was inhibited by mersalyl but not by N-ethylmaleimide or sulfobetaine - properties that differentiate it from the mitochondrial inner membrane carnitine/acylcarnitine exchange carrier. These findings are relevant to the understanding of processes for the reassembly of triacylglycerols that lipidate very low density lipoprotein particles as part of a hepatic triacylglycerol lipolysis/re-esterification cycle.  相似文献   

7.
Acyl-CoA ligases from rat brain microsomes: an immunochemical study   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Acyl-CoA ligase activities, solubilized from rat brain microsomes, were fractionated into three different peaks by hydroxyapatite chromatography. Based on physical and chemical properties, we suggested that peak A (pamitoyl-CoA ligase) and peak C (lignoceroyl-CoA ligase) were two different enzymes (A. Bhushan, R. P. Singh, and I. Singh (1986) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 246, 374-380). We raised antibodies against purified liver microsomal palmitoyl-CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3) and examined the effect of this antibody on acyl-CoA ligase activities for palmitic, arachidonic and lignoceric acids in microsomal enzyme extract and different acyl-CoA ligase peaks from the hydroxyapatite column. In an enzyme activity assay system in microsomal extract, the antisera inhibited the palmitoyl-CoA ligase activity but had very little effect on the acyl-CoA ligase activities for arachidonic and lignoceric acids. This antisera inhibited the acyl-CoA ligase activities for these three fatty acids in peak A and had no effect on these activities in peak B or peak C. Western blot analysis demonstrated that antibody to liver microsomal palmitoyl-CoA ligase cross-reacted with only peak A (palmitoyl-CoA ligase), but not with peak B or peak C. This immunochemical study demonstrates that palmitoyl-CoA ligase does not share immunological determinants with acyl-CoA ligases in peaks B or C, thus demonstrating that palmitoyl-CoA ligase (peak A) is different from the arachidonoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activities in peaks B or C.  相似文献   

8.
Washed, buffered microsomes from bovine retinal pigment epithelium catalyze retinyl ester synthesis from retinol in the absence of an exogenous acyl donor. A plot of retinyl ester synthesis versus time reaches a plateau at 123 +/- 26 nmol of retinyl ester mg-1 microsomal protein, providing a minimum value of the concentration of the endogenous acyl donor. Fatty acyl-CoA analysis by three different methods employing high performance liquid chromatography resulted in the detection of less than 1 nmol mg-1 protein of acyl-CoA, indicating that fatty acyl-CoA is not the endogenous acyl donor. Stimulation of the rate of retinyl ester synthesis by palmitoyl-CoA or ATP, CoA, and palmitate is observed following its addition at the beginning of the reaction or after the endogenous acyl source has been exhausted by 20 min of reaction with retinol. Palmitate from [14C]palmitoyl-CoA is incorporated into retinyl ester at a rate similar to that for the incorporation of [3H] retinol, demonstrating the presence of an apparent acyl-CoA:retinol acyl transferase activity. The acyl group from palmitoyl-CoA can be transferred initially to a component of the microsomes and subsequently to retinol. The product of retinyl ester synthesis from all-trans-retinol and palmitoyl-CoA is all-trans-retinyl palmitate, indicating that the stereochemical configuration is retained during esterification. The kinetic parameters for the esterification of 11-cis-retinol and all-trans-retinol are similar.  相似文献   

9.
The different topology of palmitoyl-CoA ligase (on the cytoplasmic surface) and of lignoceroyl-CoA ligase (on the luminal surface) in peroxisomal membranes suggests that these fatty acids may be transported in different form through the peroxisomal membrane (Lazo, O., Contreras, M., and Singh, I. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3981-3986), and this differential transport may account for deficient oxidation of lignoceric acid in X-adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) (Singh, I., Moser, A. B., Goldfisher, S., and Moser, H. W. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 4203-4207). To define the transport mechanism for these fatty acids through the peroxisomal membrane and its possible implication to lignoceric acid metabolism in X-ALD, we examined cofactors and energy requirements for the transport of palmitic and lignoceric acids in isolated peroxisomes from rat liver and peroxisomes isolated from X-ALD and control fibroblasts. The similar rates of transport of palmitoyl-CoA (87.6 +/- 6.3 nmol/h/mg protein) and palmitic acid in the fatty acid activating conditions (83.4 +/- 5.1 nmol/h/mg protein) and lack of transport of palmitic acid (4% of palmitoyl-CoA transport) when ATP and/or CoASH were removed or substituted by alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine-5'-triphosphate (AMPCPOP) and/or desulfoCoA-agarose from assay medium clearly demonstrate that transport of palmitic acid requires prior synthesis of palmitoyl-CoA by palmitoyl-CoA ligase on the cytoplasmic surface of peroxisomes. The 10-fold higher rate of transport of lignoceric acid (5.3 +/- 0.6 nmol/h/mg protein) as compared with lignoceroyl-CoA (0.41 +/- 0.11 nmol/h/mg protein) and lack of inhibition of transport of lignoceric acid when ATP and/or CoASH were removed or substituted with AMPCPOP or desulfoCoA-agarose suggest that lignoceric acid is transported through the peroxisomal membrane as such. Moreover, the lack of effect of removal of ATP or substitution with AMPOPCP (a nonhydrolyzable substrate) demonstrates that the translocation of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceric acid across peroxisomal membrane does not require energy. The transport, activation, and oxidation of palmitic acid are normal in peroxisomes from X-ALD. The deficient lignoceroyl-CoA ligase (13% of control) and oxidation of lignoceric acid (10% of control) as compared with normal transport of lignoceric acid into peroxisomes from X-ALD clearly demonstrates that pathogenomonic accumulation of very long chain fatty acids (greater than C22) in X-ALD is due to the deficiency of peroxisomal lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity.  相似文献   

10.
We have examined the mechanism by which extracellular free fatty acids regulate fatty acid biosynthesis in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. De novo biosynthesis in intact cells was inhibited by stearate greater than oleate greater than palmitate greater than linoleate. The amount of citrate and long chain acyl-CoA in the cells was not changed appreciably by the addition of free fatty acids to the incubation medium, indicating than free fatty acids do not regulate fatty acid biosynthesis by changing the total intracellular content of these metabolites. By measuring the incorporation of labeled free fatty acids into acyl-CoA, however, it was determined that the fatty acid composition of the acyl-CoA poolwas changed dramatically to reflect the composition of the exogenous free fatty acids. The relative inhibitory effects of different free fatty acids appear to depend on the ability of their acyl-CoA derivatives to regulate acyl-CoA carboxylase activity. The acyl-CoA concentration needed to produce 50% inhibition of purified Ehrlich cell carboxylase was found to be 0.68 mum for stearoyl-CoA, 1.6 mum for oleoyl-CoA, 2.2 mum for palmitoyl-CoA, 23 mum for myristoyl-CoA, 30 mum for lauroyl-CoA, and 37 mum for linoleoyl-CoA. In contrast to their effects on de novo synthesis, all of the free fatty acids added except stearate stimulated chain elongation in intact cells. Microsomal chain elongation, the major system for elongation in Ehrlich cells, also was regulated by the composition of the cellular acyl-CoA pool. Lauroyl-CoA, myristoyl-CoA, and palmitoyl-CoA were good substrates for elongation by isolated microsomes; oleoyl-CoA, and linoleoyl-CoA were intermediate; and stearoyl-CoA was a very poor substrate. We conclude that free fatty acids regulate fatty acid biosynthesis by changing the composition of the cellular acyl-CoA pool. These changes control the rate of malonyl-CoA production and, because of the acyl-CoA substrate specificity of the microsomal elongation system, modulate the amount of malonyl-CoA used for chain elongation.  相似文献   

11.
R W Gross 《Biochemistry》1983,22(24):5641-5646
Rabbit myocardial cytosolic acyl coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) hydrolase activity was purified to near-homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation and ion-exchange, gel filtration, chromatofocusing, and hydroxylapatite chromatographies. Kinetic analysis of the purified protein demonstrated a maximum velocity of 24 mumol/(mg . min) and an apparent Michaelis constant of 50 microM. Cytosolic acyl-CoA hydrolase and lysophospholipase activities cochromatographed in every fraction of every step. The purified protein was a single band (Mr 23 000) after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining. These results suggest that cytosolic lysophospholipase and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activities are catalyzed by a single polypeptide with dual activities. Palmitoyl-CoA competitively inhibited lysophospholipase activity (Ki = 4 microM). Low concentrations (20 microM) of lysophosphatidylcholine or L-palmitoylcarnitine increased palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activity at low palmitoyl-CoA concentrations but had little effect at high concentrations of palmitoyl-CoA. In contrast, high concentrations (100 microM) of lysophosphatidylcholine or L-palmitoylcarnitine inhibited palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activity. The results suggest that interactions between endogenous cardiac amphiphiles and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase contribute to the regulation of intracellular long-chain acyl-CoA concentrations and therefore potentially modulate fluxes of fatty acid through several biochemical pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Since we had shown recently that fatty acyl-CoA derivatives stimulate (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity at suboptimal ATP concentrations, we used sealed vesicles of beef heart sarcolemma to examine the effects of these compounds on the transport function of the enzyme. The sodium pump was detected in inside-out vesicles as a component of Na+ uptake that was dependent on intravesicular (extracellular) K+ and extravesicular (intracellular) ATP and was sensitive to vanadate and digitoxigenin. The pump flux was stimulated without a lag by palmitoyl-CoA (K0.5 = 3 microM) when ATP concentration was 50 microM, but not when it was 2 mM. Saturating palmitoyl-CoA reduced the K0.5 of ATP for the pump by a factor of 3-6. Raising the intracellular K+ concentration increased the K0.5 of ATP, and this effect of K+ was antagonized by palmitoyl-CoA. At concentrations up to 0.5 mM, palmitoyl-CoA had no effect on ATP-independent (passive) Na+ uptake. All tested long-chain acyl-CoA derivatives had effects similar to that of palmitoyl-CoA; but CoA, acetyl-CoA, and palmitic acid were ineffective. Palmitoyl carnitine and docosahexanoic acid, amphiphilic compounds with inhibitory and biphasic effects on the hydrolytic activity of purified (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, had purely inhibitory effects on the pump at high concentrations that also affected the passive fluxes. The data support the proposition that fatty acyl-CoA derivatives mimic the effect of ATP at a regulatory site and suggest that these intracellular liponucleotides may be involved in the control of the pump.  相似文献   

13.
In rat liver hypo-osmotically treated mitochondria, 2-mercaptoacetate inhibits respiration induced by palmitoyl-CoA, octanoate or butyryl-CoA only when the reaction medium is supplemented with ATP. Under this condition, NADH-stimulated respiration is not affected. In liver mitochondrial matrix, the presence of ATP is also required to observe a 2-mercaptoacetate-induced inhibition of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases tested with palmitoyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA or isovaleryl-CoA as substrate. As the oxidation of these substrates is also inhibited by the incubation medium resulting from the reaction of 2-mercaptoacetate with acetyl-CoA synthase, with conditions under which 2-mercaptoacetate has no effect, 2-mercaptoacetyl-CoA seems to be the likely inhibitory metabolite responsible for the effects of 2-mercaptoacetate. Kinetic experiments show that the main effect of the 2-mercaptoacetate-active metabolite is to decrease the affinities of fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenases towards palmitoyl-CoA or butyryl-CoA and of isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase towards isovaleryl-CoA. Addition of N-ethylmaleimide to mitochondrial matrix pre-exposed to 2-mercaptoacetate results in the immediate reversion of the inhibitions of palmitoyl-CoA and isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenations and in a delayed reversion of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenation. These results led us to conclude that (i) the ATP-dependent conversion of 2-mercaptoacetate into an inhibitory metabolite takes place in the liver mitochondrial matrix and (ii) the three fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase are mainly competitively inhibited by this compound. Finally, the present study also suggests that the inhibitory metabolite of 2-mercaptoacetate may bind non-specifically to, or induce conformational changes at, the acyl-CoA binding sites of these dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

14.
Data obtained in earlier studies with rats fed diets containing high doses of peroxisome proliferators (niadenate, tiadenol, clofibrate, or nitotinic acid) are used to look for a quantitative relationship between peroxisomal beta-oxidation, palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase, palmitoyl-CoA synthetase and carnitine palmitoyltransferase activities, and the cellular concentration of their substrate and reaction products. The order of the hyperlipidemic drugs with regard to their effect on CoA derivatives and enzyme activities was niadenate greater than tiadenol greater than clofibrate greater than nicotinic acid. Linear regression analysis of long-chain acyl-CoA content versus palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase and peroxisomal beta-oxidation activity showed highly significant linear correlations both in the total liver homogenate and in the peroxisome-enriched fractions. A dose-response curve of tiadenol showed that carnitine palmitoyltransferase and palmitoyl-CoA synthetase activities and the ratio of long-chain acyl-CoA to free CoASH in total homogenate rose at low doses before detectable changes occurred in the peroxisomal beta-oxidation and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activity. A plot of this ratio parallelled the palmitoyl-CoA synthetase activity. The specific activity of microsomally localized carnitine palmitoyl-transferase was low and unchanged up to a dose where no enhanced peroxisomal beta-oxidation was observed, but over this dose the activity increased considerably so that the specific of the enzyme in the mitochondrial and microsomal fractions became comparable. The mitochondrial palmitoyl-CoA synthetase activity decreased gradually. The correlations may be interpreted as reflecting a common regulation mechanism for palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase and peroxisomal beta-oxidation enzymes, i.e., the cellular level of long-chain acyl-CoA acting as the metabolic message for peroxisomal proliferation resulting in induction of peroxisomal beta-oxidation and palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activity. The findings are discussed with regard to their possible consequences for mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation and the conversion of long-chain acyl-L-carnitine to acyl-CoA derivatives.  相似文献   

15.
The activities of antimycin A-insensitive palmitoyl-CoA oxidation and of palmitoyl-CoA oxidase in peroxisomes from chicken liver were similar to those of rat liver. Catalase and d-amino acid oxidase activities in peroxisomes from chicken liver were lower than those of rat liver and urate oxidase was not detected. Carnitine acetyltransferase and palmitoyltransferase levels in chicken liver were 18- and 2-fold higher, respectively, than those of rat liver. Peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA oxidation of chicken liver was inhibited by cyanide, in contrast to that of rat liver, although it was insensitive to antimycin A. Subcellular distribution of this enzyme was similar to that of rat liver; i.e., it was located only in the peroxisomes. The fatty acyl-CoA oxidase had a higher affinity toward medium- to long-chain fatty acyl-CoAs (C8 to C16) than shorter-chain analogs. The fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase had a broad affinity toward fatty acyl-CoAs (C4 to C18). Carnitine acetyltransferase was distributed equally in both peroxisomes and mitochondria. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase was distributed in the proportion of 20 and 80% in peroxisomes and mitochondria, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Palmitoyl-CoA inhibited crude glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in the eggs of the sea urchin, Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus. Fifty percent inhibition of the glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in the supernatant of unfertilized eggs was obtained with 0.43 ± 0.05 μm palmitoyl-CoA, and of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase with 4.41 ± 0.20 μm palmitoyl-CoA. Also, these enzymes in fertilized eggs 30 min after fertilization were inhibited by palmitoyl-CoA almost as much as in unfertilized eggs. Na-Palmitate, coenzyme A, acetyl-CoA, palmitoylcarnitine, and carnitine failed to exert any inhibitory effect on the activities of these dehydrogenases. The intracellular concentration of long-chain fatty acyl-CoA in unfertilized eggs (3.08 ± 0.33 nmol/106 eggs) was high enough for the inhibition of these enzymes, and decreased following fertilization to a low level (1.49 ± 0.08 nmol/106 eggs 30 min after fertilization). Spermine and spermidine canceled the inhibition of these enzymes by palmitoyl-CoA. In view of the inhibition of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase by palmitoyl-CoA, these dehydrogenases in the pentose monophosphate cycle are probably inhibited in unfertilized eggs by long-chain fatty acyl-CoA and released from the inhibited state by both the decrease in the level of long-chain acyl-CoA and the increase in the level of polyamines following fertilization.  相似文献   

17.
Developmental changes in fatty acid oxidation system of rat liver peroxisomes were studied to compare with that of mitochondria. More apparent enhancement of peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA oxidase was observed than mitochondrial palmitoyl-CoA dehydrogenase during prenatal (20-day fetal) to neonatal (1-day after birth) period. The characteristics of peroxisomal enzymes, fatty acyl-CoA oxidase and carnitime acyltransferase, on the bases of substrate specificities, were rapidly established within the 1 day after birth accompanied by the marked enhancement of these activities. These findings indicate that peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation system plays an important role for early growth of neonatal rats; this system may contribute to supplying short- to medium-chain fatty acyl-CoA and NADH2 for mitochondrial energy formation system.  相似文献   

18.
Fatty acid transport protein 4 (FATP4) is an integral membrane protein expressed in the plasma and internal membranes of the small intestine and adipocyte as well as in the brain, kidney, liver, skin, and heart. FATP4 has been hypothesized to be bifunctional, exhibiting both fatty acid transport and acyl-CoA synthetase activities that work in concert to mediate fatty acid influx across biological membranes. To determine whether FATP4 is an acyl-CoA synthetase, the murine protein was engineered to contain a C-terminal FLAG epitope tag, expressed in COS1 cells via adenovirus-mediated infection and purified to near homogeneity using alpha-FLAG affinity chromatography. Kinetic analysis of the enzyme was carried out for long chain (palmitic acid, C16:0) and very long chain (lignoceric acid, C24:0) fatty acids as well as for ATP and CoA. FATP4 exhibited substrate specificity for C16:0 and C24:0 fatty acids with a V(max)/K(m) (C16:0)/V(max)/K(m) (C24:0) of 1.5. Like purified FATP1, FATP4 was insensitive to inhibition by triacsin C but was sensitive to feedback inhibition by acyl-CoA. Although purified FATP4 exhibited high levels of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA synthetase activity, extracts from the skin and intestine of FATP4 null mice exhibited reduced esterification for C24:0, but not C16:0 or C18:1, suggesting that in vivo, defects in very long chain fatty acid uptake may underlie the skin disorder phenotype of null mice.  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.
Willis RM  Wahlen BD  Seefeldt LC  Barney BM 《Biochemistry》2011,50(48):10550-10558
Fatty alcohols are of interest as a renewable feedstock to replace petroleum compounds used as fuels, in cosmetics, and in pharmaceuticals. One biological approach to the production of fatty alcohols involves the sequential action of two bacterial enzymes: (i) reduction of a fatty acyl-CoA to the corresponding fatty aldehyde catalyzed by a fatty acyl-CoA reductase, followed by (ii) reduction of the fatty aldehyde to the corresponding fatty alcohol catalyzed by a fatty aldehyde reductase. Here, we identify, purify, and characterize a novel bacterial enzyme from Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8 that catalyzes the reduction of fatty acyl-CoA by four electrons to the corresponding fatty alcohol, eliminating the need for a separate fatty aldehyde reductase. The enzyme is shown to reduce fatty acyl-CoAs ranging from C8:0 to C20:4 to the corresponding fatty alcohols, with the highest rate found for palmitoyl-CoA (C16:0). The dependence of the rate of reduction of palmitoyl-CoA on substrate concentration was cooperative, with an apparent K(m) ~ 4 μM, V(max) ~ 200 nmol NADP(+) min(-1) (mg protein)(-1), and n ~ 3. The enzyme also reduced a range of fatty aldehydes with decanal having the highest activity. The substrate cis-11-hexadecenal was reduced in a cooperative manner with an apparent K(m) of ~50 μM, V(max) of ~8 μmol NADP(+) min(-1) (mg protein)(-1), and n ~ 2.  相似文献   

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