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1.
2.
The fatty acid transport function of fatty acid-binding proteins   总被引:38,自引:0,他引:38  
The intracellular fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) comprise a family of 14-15 kDa proteins which bind long-chain fatty acids. A role for FABPs in fatty acid transport has been hypothesized for several decades, and the accumulated indirect and correlative evidence is largely supportive of this proposed function. In recent years, a number of experimental approaches which more directly examine the transport function of FABPs have been taken. These include molecular level in vitro modeling of fatty acid transfer mechanisms, whole cell studies of fatty acid uptake and intracellular transfer following genetic manipulation of FABP type and amount, and an examination of cells and tissues from animals engineered to lack expression of specific FABPs. Collectively, data from these studies have provided strong support for defining the FABPs as fatty acid transport proteins. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the fundamental mechanisms by which cellular fatty acid trafficking is modulated by the FABPs.  相似文献   

3.
Cytosolic long-chain fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) are found in tissues that metabolize fatty acids. Like most lipid binding proteins, their specific functions remain unclear. Two classes have been described. Membrane-active FABPs interact directly with membranes during exchange of fatty acids between the protein binding site and the membrane, while membrane-inactive FABPs bind only to fatty acids that are already in aqueous solution. Despite these binding proteins, most fatty acids in cell cytoplasm appear to be bound to membranes. This paper reviews data suggesting that FABPs catalyze transfer of fatty acids between intracellular membranes, often across considerable intracellular distances. This process occurs in three distinct steps: dissociation of the fatty acid from a donor membrane, diffusion of the fatty acid across the intervening water layer, and binding to an acceptor membrane. Membrane-active FABPs catalyze dissociation of the fatty acid from the donor membrane and binding to the acceptor membrane, while membrane-inactive FABPs catalyze diffusion of fatty acids across the aqueous cytosol. Thus, FABPs catalyze all three steps in intracellular transport. A simple quantitative model has been developed that predicts the rate of intracellular transport as a function of the concentration, affinity and diffusional mobility of the binding protein. Different FABPs may have evolved to match the specific transport requirements of the cell type within which they are found.  相似文献   

4.
Fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) were isolated from the cytosols of hearts of man, pig, and rat by gel filtration and anion-exchange chromatography. The heart FABPs had a Mr of about 15,000 (pig, rat) and 15,500 (man); pI values were 5.2, 4.9, and 5.0 for human, pig, and rat heart, respectively. In contrast to liver FABPs, tryptophan was present in the heart FABPs. Binding characteristics for long-chain fatty acids determined with the radiochemical Lipidex assay were comparable for all three proteins. Heart FABPs also bind palmitoyl-CoA and -carnitine with an affinity comparable to that for palmitic acid. Other ligands investigated, heme, bilirubin, cholesterol, retinoids, and prostaglandins, could not compete with oleic acid for binding by human heart FABP. Binding parameters of FABP for oleic acid from multilamellar liposomes were comparable to those from the Lipidex binding assay. Immunological interspecies cross-reactivity with antisera against the heart FABPs was much higher between man and pig than between rat and man or pig. None of the antisera reacted with liver FABPs. The IgG fraction of anti-human heart FABP serum inhibited fatty acid binding to human heart FABP.  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(21):4024-4032
Intracellular transport of fatty acids involves binding of ligands to their carrier fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) and interactions of ligand-free and -bound FABPs with membranes. Previous studies focused on ligand-free FABPs. Here, our amide hydrogen exchange data showed that oleic acid binding to human intestinal FABP (hIFABP) stabilizes the protein, most likely through enhancing the hydrogen-bonding network, and induces rearrangement of sidechains even far away from the ligand binding site. Using NMR relaxation techniques, we found that the ligand binding affects not only conformational exchanges between major and minor states but also the affinity of hIFABP to nanodiscs. Analyses of the relaxation and amide exchange data suggested that two minor native-like states existing in both ligand-free and -bound hIFABPs originate from global “breathing” motions, while one minor native-like state comes from local motions. The amide hydrogen exchange data also indicated that helix αII undergoes local unfolding through which ligands can exit from the binding cavity.  相似文献   

6.
The intracellular fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) are abundantly expressed in almost all tissues. They exhibit high affinity binding of a single long-chain fatty acid, with the exception of liver FABP, which binds two fatty acids or other hydrophobic molecules. FABPs have highly similar tertiary structures consisting of a 10-stranded antiparallel β-barrel and an N-terminal helix-turn-helix motif. Research emerging in the last decade has suggested that FABPs have tissue-specific functions that reflect tissue-specific aspects of lipid and fatty acid metabolism. Proposed roles for FABPs include assimilation of dietary lipids in the intestine, targeting of liver lipids to catabolic and anabolic pathways, regulation of lipid storage and lipid-mediated gene expression in adipose tissue and macrophages, fatty acid targeting to β-oxidation pathways in muscle, and maintenance of phospholipid membranes in neural tissues. The regulation of these diverse processes is accompanied by the expression of different and sometimes multiple FABPs in these tissues and may be driven by protein-protein and protein-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

7.
1. Two forms of fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) were isolated from human, pig and rat liver cytosols by gelfiltration and anion-exchange chromatography. 2. Both forms did not show physicochemical or chemical differences. They had an Mr of about 14.5 kDa for all species. pI Values were 5.8 for both forms of human and pig liver FABP and 6.4 for both forms of rat liver FABP. In contrast to heart FABPs no tryptophan was present in liver FABPs. 3. Liver FABPs show a much higher enhancement of fluorescence at binding of 11-dansylaminoundecanoic acid, 16-anthroyloxy-palmitic acid and 1-pyrene-dodecanoic acid than heart FABPs and additionally a blue shift in excitation and emission wavelengths with the first fatty acid. 4. The bulky side-chain did not affect fatty acid binding since binding constants of liver FABPs were comparable for these fluorescent fatty acids and oleic acid (0.3-0.7 microM). 5. A 1:1 binding stoichiometry was obtained for oleic acid binding with heart and liver FABPs. 6. Liver FABPs have a high binding affinity for C16-C22 saturated and unsaturated fatty acids, palmitoyl-CoA, bromo-substituted fatty acids, POCA, tetradecylglycidic acid and flavaspidic acid. 7. Fatty acid binding could be reduced to less than 50% by arginine modification with 2,3-butadione or by enzymatic degradation of FABPs with trypsin or pronase.  相似文献   

8.
Fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) may play an important role in the transport and metabolism of fatty acids during human embryogenesis. Three fractions of FABP, namely, DE-I, DE-II and DE-III, having Mr 14,200 Da each and pI values 7.8, 6.9 and 5.4, respectively, have been detected in human fetal liver. These proteins were purified by heat and butanol precipitation of fetal liver supernatant as well as by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. Fetal liver FABPs are immunochemically identical to each other. Concentrations of DE-I, DE-II and DE-III increase gradually from early gestation to term. DE-I is almost lipid-free, DE-II binds long-chain fatty acids nonspecifically and DE-III transports mainly arachidonic acid. DE-II and DE-III protect glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which furnishes NADPH for fatty acid synthesis, from the feed-back inhibition exerted by added palmitoyl-CoA and oleate. In the absence of exogenous inhibitors, this enzyme is stimulated by FABPs. DE-I has no effect on such inhibition. Thus, FABPs play a regulatory role in critical aspects of cellular physiology during human embryogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
The role of fatty acid binding proteins as intracellular fatty acid transporters may require their direct interaction with membranes. In this way different mechanisms have been previously characterized through experimental studies suggesting different models for FABPs–membrane association, although the process in which the molecule adsorbs to the membrane remains to be elucidated. To estimate the importance of the electrostatic energy in the FABP–membrane interaction, we computationally modeled the interaction of different FABPs with both anionic and neutral membranes. Free Electrostatic Energy of Binding (dE), was computed using Finite Difference Poisson Boltzmann Equation (FDPB) method as implemented in APBS (Adaptive Poisson Boltzmann Solver). Based on the computational analysis, it is found that recruitment to membranes is facilitated by non-specific electrostatic interactions. Also energetic analysis can quantitatively differentiate among the mechanisms of membrane association proposed and determinate the most energetically favorable configuration for the membrane-associated states of different FABPs. This type of calculations could provide a starting point for further computational or experimental analysis.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(21):4672-4681
Fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) can facilitate the transfer of long-chain fatty acids between intracellular membranes across considerable distances. The transfer process involves fatty acids, their donor membrane and acceptor membrane, and FABPs, implying that potential protein-membrane interactions exist. Despite intensive studies on FABP-membrane interactions, the interaction mode remains elusive, and the protein-membrane association and dissociation rates are inconsistent. In this study, we used nanodiscs (NDs) as mimetic membranes to investigate FABP-membrane interactions. Our NMR experiments showed that human intestinal FABP interacts weakly with both negatively charged and neutral membranes, but it prefers the negatively charged one. Through simultaneous analysis of NMR relaxation in the rotating-frame (R1ρ), relaxation dispersion, chemical exchange saturation transfer, and dark-state exchange saturation transfer data, we estimated the affinity of the protein to negatively charged NDs, the dissociation rate, and apparent association rate. We further showed that the protein in the ND-bound state adopts a conformation different from the native structure and the second helix is very likely involved in interactions with NDs. We also found a membrane-induced FABP conformational state that exists only in the presence of NDs. This state is native-like, different from other conformational states in structure, unbound to NDs, and in dynamic equilibrium with the ND-bound state.  相似文献   

12.
Fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) are small cytosolic proteins with virtually identical backbone structures that facilitate the solubility and intracellular transport of fatty acids. At least eight different types of FABP occur, each with a specific tissue distribution and possibly with a distinct function. To define the functional characteristics of all eight human FABPs, viz. heart (H), brain (B), myelin (M), adipocyte (A), epidermal (E), intestinal (I), liver (L) and ileal lipid-binding protein (I-LBP), we studied their ligand specificity, their conformational stability and their immunological crossreactivity. Additionally, binding of bile acids to I-LBP was studied. The FABP types showed differences in fatty acid binding affinity. Generally, the affinity for palmitic acid was lower than for oleic and arachidonic acid. All FABP types, except E-FABP, I-FABP and I-LBP interacted with 1-anilinonaphtalene-8-sulphonic acid (ANS). Only L-FABP, I-FABP and M-FABP showed binding of 11-((5-dimethylaminonaphtalene-1-sulfonyl)amino)undecanoic acid (DAUDA). I-LBP showed increasing binding of bile acids in the order taurine-conjugated>glycine-conjugated>unconjugated bile acids. A hydroxylgroup of bile acids at position 7 decreased and at position 12 increased the binding affinity to I-LBP. The fatty acid-binding affinity and the conformation of FABP types were differentially affected in the presence of urea. Our results demonstrate significant differences in ligand binding, conformational stability and surface properties between different FABP types which may point to a specific function in certain cells and tissues. The preference of I-LBP (but not L-FABP) for conjugated bile acids is in accordance with a specific role in bile acid reabsorption in the ileum.  相似文献   

13.
Vesicles having diameters from 20 to 200 nm were prepared from egg-yolk phosphatidylcholine (PC) and were separated as well as analyzed by methods that can be carried out with standard laboratory equipment. Gel-chromatography on Sephacryl S 1000 was adapted for expeditious size analysis of vesicles as well as for isolation of vesicle populations having a narrow range of diameters. The internal volume of vesicles was derived from enzymic tests for PC and for glucose encapsulated. Size analysis and enzymic determinations provided a convenient check for the lamellarity of membranes produced.Fatty acids and fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) must interact in vivo in the presence of cellular membranes. As a model, interactions between unilamellar vesicles, anthroyloxypalmitic acid (A16:0) and FABPs were studied with the aid of gel-chromatographic methods elaborated and of fluorescence spectroscopy. FABP from bovine heart donated A16:0 to membranes, whereas FABP from bovine liver removed this fatty acid from vesicle membranes. The results revealed characteristic differences between cardiac and hepatic FABPs with regard to binding a fatty acid.  相似文献   

14.
Fatty acid binding proteins (FABP) form a family of proteins displaying tissue-specific expression. These proteins are involved in fatty acid (FA) transport and metabolism by mechanisms that also appear to be tissue-specific. Cellular retinoid binding proteins are related proteins with unknown roles in FA transport and metabolism. To better understand the origin of these tissue-specific differences we report new measurements, using the acrylodated intestinal fatty acid binding protein (ADIFAB) method, of the binding of fatty acids (FA) to human fatty acid binding proteins (FABP) from brain, heart, intestine, liver, and myelin. We also measured binding of FA to a retinoic acid (CRABP-I) and a retinol (CRBP-II) binding protein and we have extended to 19 different FA our characterization of the FA-ADIFAB and FA-rat intestinal FABP interactions. These studies extend our previous analyses of human FABP from adipocyte and rat FABPs from heart, intestine, and liver. Binding affinities varied according to the order brain approximately myelin approximately heart > liver > intestine > CRABP > CRBP. In contrast to previous studies, no protein revealed a high degree of selectivity for particular FA. The results indicate that FA solubility (hydrophobicity) plays a major role in governing binding affinities; affinities tend to increase with increasing hydrophobicity (decreasing solubility) of the FA. However, our results also reveal that, with the exception of the intestinal protein, FABPs exhibit an additional attractive interaction for unsaturated FA that partially compensates for their trend toward lower affinities due to their higher aqueous solubilities. Thermodynamic potentials were determined for oleate and arachidonate binding to a subset of the FABP and retinoid binding proteins. FA binding to all FABPs was enthalpically driven. The DeltaH degrees values for paralogous FABPs, proteins from the same species but different tissues, reveal an exceptionally wide range of values, from -22 kcal/mol (myelin) to -7 kcal/mol (adipocyte). For orthologous FABPs from the same tissue but different species, DeltaH degrees values were similar. In contrast to the enthalpic dominance of FA binding to FABP, binding of FA to CRABP-I was entropically driven. This is consistent with the notion that FA specificity for FABP is determined by the enthalpy of binding. Proteins from different tissues also revealed considerable heterogeneity in heat capacity changes upon FA binding, DeltaC(p) values ranged between 0 and -1.3 kcal mol(-1) K(-1). The results demonstrate that thermodynamic parameters are quite different for paralogous but are quite similar for orthologous FABP, suggesting tissue-specific differences in FABP function that may be conserved across species.  相似文献   

15.
Since insect flight muscles are among the most active muscles in nature, their extremely high rates of fuel supply and oxidation pose interesting physiological problems. Long-distance flights of species like locusts and hawkmoths are fueled through fatty acid oxidation. The lipid substrate is transported as diacylglycerol in the blood, employing a unique and efficient lipoprotein shuttle system. Following diacylglycerol hydrolysis by a flight muscle lipoprotein lipase, the liberated fatty acids are ultimately oxidized in the mitochondria. Locust flight muscle cytoplasm contains an abundant fatty acid-binding protein (FABP). The flight muscle FABP ofLocusta migratoria is a 15 kDa protein with an isoelectric point of 5.8, binding fatty acids in a 1:1 molar stoichiometric ratio. Binding affinity of the FABP for longchain fatty acids (apparent dissociation constant Kd=5.21±0.16 M) is however markedly lower than that of mammalian FABPs. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence shares structural homologies with two insect FABPs recently purified from hawkmoth midgut, as well as with mammalian FABPs. In contrast to all other isolated FABPs, the NH2 terminus of locust flight muscle FABP appeared not to be acetylated. During development of the insect, a marked increase in fatty acid binding capacity of flight muscle homogenate was measured, along with similar increases in both fatty acid oxidation capacity and citrate synthase activity. Although considerable circumstantial evidence would support a function of locust flight muscle FABP in intracellular uptake and transport of fatty acids, the finding of another extremely well-flying migratory insect, the hawkmothAcherontia atropos, which employs the same lipoprotein shuttle system, however contains relatively very low amounts of FABP in its flight muscles, renders the proposed function of FABP in insect flight muscles questionable.  相似文献   

16.
Fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) are involved in binding and storing hydrophobic ligands such as long-chain fatty acids, as well as transporting them to the appropriate compartments in the cell. Epidermal fatty acid-binding protein (FABP5) is an intracellular lipid-binding protein that is abundantly expressed in adipocytes and macrophages. Previous studies have revealed that the FABP5 expression level is closely related to malignancy in various types of cancer. However, its precise functions in the metabolisms of cancer cells remain unclear. Here, we revealed that FABP5 knockdown significantly induced downregulation of the genes expression, such as hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), monoacylglycerol lipase (MAGL), elongation of long-chain fatty acid member 6 (Elovl6), and acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain family member 1 (ACSL1), which are involved in altered lipid metabolism, lipolysis, and de novo FA synthesis in highly aggressive prostate and breast cancer cells. Moreover, we demonstrated that FABP5 induced inflammation and cytokine production through the nuclear factor-kappa B signaling pathway activated by reactive oxygen species and protein kinase C in PC-3 and MDA-MB-231 cells. Thus, FABP5 might regulate lipid quality and/or quantity to promote aggressiveness such as cell growth, invasiveness, survival, and inflammation in prostate and breast cancer cells. In the present study, we have revealed for the first time that high expression of FABP5 plays a critical role in alterations of lipid metabolism, leading to cancer development and metastasis in highly aggressive prostate and breast cancer cells.  相似文献   

17.
Intracellular lipid-binding proteins have evolved from a common ancestral gene with the appearance of mitochondrial oxidation, to guarantee, for example, transport of fatty acids through the aqueous cytosol to their site of utilization. The mammalian forms of these lipid carriers are structurally well-characterized and have been categorized, on the basis of sequence similarities and several typical ligand-binding features, into four subfamilies. Only a single complex structure of an invertebrate fatty-acid-binding protein (FABP) has been reported to date, which reveals a unique ligand-binding arrangement yet unknown in vertebrate FABPs. In the present study, the structure of a second invertebrate FABP (locust muscle) complexed with a fatty acid has been determined on the basis of intermolecular NOE connectivities between the protein and the uniformly (13)C-enriched oleate ligand. The resulting ligand conformation, although resembling the closely related mammalian heart- and adipocyte-type FABPs, is characterized by certain binding features that differ significantly from the typical hairpin-turn ligand shapes of the latter forms. This is primarily due to an alanine-to-leucine substitution in locust FABPs that produces a steric hindrance for ligand binding. A comparison with an FABP from tobacco hornworm larvae furthermore demonstrates that certain amino acid substitutions that appear to be specific for invertebrates decidedly influence the binding arrangement inside the protein cavity. Hence, as a result of these evolutionary variations, invertebrate FABPs may display a much greater diversity in intracellular lipid binding than observed for the mammalian transport proteins, thus possibly providing new insights for the design of modified lipid carriers.  相似文献   

18.
The mammalian fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) are thought to be important for the transport and metabolism of fatty acids in numerous cell types. The transfer of FA from different members of the FABP family to membranes has been shown to occur by two distinct mechanisms, an aqueous diffusion-based mechanism and a collisional mechanism, wherein the FABP interacts directly with membrane acceptors. Much of the work that underlies this concept comes from efforts using rodent FABPs. Given the increasing awareness of links between FABPs and several chronic diseases in humans, it was important to establish the mechanisms of FA transfer for human FABPs. In the present studies, we examined the rate and mechanism of fatty acid transfer from four pairs of human and rodent (rat or mouse, as specified) FABPs: hLFABP and rLFABP, hIFABP and rIFABP, hHFABP and rHFABP, and hAFABP and mAFABP. In the case of human IFABP, both the Ala54 and Thr54 forms were examined. The results show clearly that for all FABPs examined, the mechanisms of ligand transfer observed for rodent proteins hold true for their human counterparts. Moreover, it appears that the Ala to Thr substitution at residue 54 of the human IFABP does not alter the fundamental mechanism of ligand transfer to membranes, but nevertheless causes a consistent decrease in the rate of transfer.  相似文献   

19.
Fatty acids and their metabolites regulate immune cell function. The present study was undertaken to examine the detailed distribution of fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs), the cytosolic chaperones of fatty acids, in mouse peripheral immune organs. Using immunohistochemistry, FABP7 was localized to the alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA)+ fibroblastic reticular cells, which construct the stromal reticula in the T cell areas of the peripheral lymph nodes and spleen. Immunoelectron microscopy showed that FABP7+ cells enclosed the collagen fibers, forming a conduit system, which transport lymph and associated low-molecular-mass proteins. In contrast, FABP5+ cells were distributed throughout the lymph node and contained well-developed lysosome and phagocytic materials within the cytoplasm. The mesenteric lymph nodes of FABP7 knockout mice showed normal histological features, but the percentage of CD4+ cells was significantly increased compared with that in wild-type mice. These data indicate that FABP7 may be involved in T cell homeostasis, possibly by modulating lipid metabolism in fibroblastic reticular cells within the peripheral lymph nodes.  相似文献   

20.
The structures of intestinal and liver fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) have been determined from an analysis of the nucleotide sequences of cloned cDNAs. The primary translation product of intestinal FABP mRNA contains 132 residues (Mr = 15 124). Liver FABP mRNA encodes a 127 amino acid polypeptide (Mr = 14 273). In vitro co-translational cleavage and translocation assays showed that neither sequence has a cleavable signal peptide or signal peptide equivalent - suggesting that the FABPs do not enter the secretory apparatus but rather are targeted to the cytoplasm. A variety of computational techniques were used to compare the two FABP sequences. The results indicate that liver and intestinal FABP are paralogous homologues. A superfamily of proteins was defined which includes the FABPs, the cellular retinol and retinoic acid binding proteins, the P2 protein of peripheral nerve myelin, and a polypeptide known as 422 whose synthesis is induced during differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells to adipocytes. No sequence homologies were noted between any of these small molecular weight cytosolic proteins and nonspecific lipid transfer protein (sterol carrier protein 2), phosphatidylcholine transfer protein, serum albumin or apolipoprotein AI. The FABPs may have structural features responsible for lipid-protein interactions that are not present in these non-homologous sequences. The distribution of intestinal and liver FABP mRNAs in adult rat tissues and the changes in FABP gene expression which occur during gastrointestinal development support the notion that these proteins are involved in fatty acid uptake, transport and/or compartmentalization. However, differences in tissue distribution and periods of non-coordinate expression during gastrointestinal ontogeny suggest that the two FABPs have distinct functions. The relationship between intestinal and liver FABPs and similar sized cytosolic FABPs isolated from brain, skeletal and cardiac muscle remains unclear. Recombinant DNA techniques combined with comparative sequence analyses offer a useful approach for defining unique as well as general structure-function relationships in this group of fatty acid binding proteins.  相似文献   

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