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1.
2.
The uptake of arachidonoyl ethanolamide (anandamide, AEA) in rat basophilic leukemia cells (RBL-2H3) has been proposed to occur via a saturable transporter that is blocked by specific inhibitors. Measuring uptake at 25 s, when fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) does not appreciably affect uptake, AEA accumulated via a nonsaturable mechanism at 37 degrees C. Interestingly, saturation was observed when uptake was plotted using unbound AEA at 37 degrees C. Such apparent saturation can be explained by rate-limited delivery of AEA through an unstirred water layer surrounding the cells (1). In support of this, we observed kinetics consistent with rate-limited diffusion at 0 degrees C. Novel transport inhibitors have been synthesized that are either weak FAAH inhibitors or do not inhibit FAAH in vitro (e.g. UCM707, OMDM2, and AM1172). In the current study, none of these purported AEA transporter inhibitors affected uptake at 25 s. Longer incubation times illuminate downstream events that drive AEA uptake. Unlike the situation at 25 s, the efficacy of these inhibitors was unmasked at 5 min with appreciable inhibition of AEA accumulation correlating with partial inhibition of AEA hydrolysis. The uptake and hydrolysis profiles observed with UCM707, VDM11, OMDM2, and AM1172 mirrored two selective and potent FAAH inhibitors CAY10400 and URB597 (at low concentrations), indicating that weak inhibition of FAAH can have a pronounced effect upon AEA uptake. At 5 min, the putative transport inhibitors did not reduce AEA uptake in FAAH chemical knock-out cells. This strongly suggests that the target of UCM707, VDM11, OMDM2, and AM1172 is not a transporter at the plasma membrane but rather FAAH, or an uncharacterized intracellular component that delivers AEA to FAAH. This system is therefore unique among neuro/immune modulators because AEA, an uncharged hydrophobic molecule, diffuses into cells and partial inhibition of FAAH has a pronounced effect upon its uptake.  相似文献   

3.
The polar head group that was released by treating an insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) stimulated pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) in both subcellular and whole cell assays. Stimulation of PDH activity in the subcellular assay was detected after gel filtration chromatography of the polar head group. This stimulation was not due to the presence of contaminating calcium and magnesium. The PDH-stimulating activity was proportional to the amount of polar head group added to the assay. The effect of the polar head group on PDH in the subcellular assay was blocked by sodium fluoride, suggesting that the polar head group activated the PDH phosphatase. In the whole cell assay, the polar head group stimulated PDH activity to an equal or greater extent as a physiological concentration of insulin. The effect of the polar head group was detected at 5 min, peaked at 10 min, and declined thereafter. In contrast, insulin stimulated PDH activity more slowly, but consistently. The PDH-stimulating activity eluted after bacitracin but ahead of ATP during gel filtration chromatography, and it was destroyed by exposure to NH4OH or alkaline phosphatase and by boiling in water. These data support the proposal that an early step in insulin action is the release of insulinomimetic polar head group from the insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid.  相似文献   

4.
The melting curves of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) in the presence of 29 reversible inhibitors were measured using a thiol-reactive fluorophore. The thermal stability (T(m)) of the FAAH/inhibitor complex varied significantly depending on the chemical characteristics of the inhibitors, notably variations in the head group. Two separate distributions were observed when T(m) was plotted against K(i). The majority of the inhibitors showed a positive correlation between binding affinity and T(m), however inhibitors with a pyridine carboxylic acid moiety in the head group fell in a distinct and uncorrelated distribution when tail groups were varied.  相似文献   

5.
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is an integral membrane enzyme that catabolizes several bioactive lipids in vivo. Most of the physiological substrates of FAAH characterized to date belong to the N-acyl ethanolamine (NAE) class of fatty acid amides, including the endocannabinoid anandamide, the anti-inflammatory lipid N-palmitoyl ethanolamine, and the satiating factor N-oleoyl ethanolamine. We recently identified a second structural class of fatty acid amides regulated by FAAH in vivo: the N-acyl taurines (NATs). Global metabolite profiling revealed high concentrations of long chain (> or = C20) saturated NATs in the central nervous system (CNS) of FAAH(-/-) mice. Here, we use metabolite profiling to characterize the FAAH-NAT system in peripheral mouse tissues. Livers and kidneys of FAAH(-/-) mice possessed dramatic elevations in NATs, which, in contrast to those detected in the CNS, were enriched in polyunsaturated acyl chains (e.g., C20:4, C22:6). Peripheral NATs rose more than 10-fold within 1 h following pharmacological inactivation of FAAH and reached levels up to approximately 5000 pmol/g tissue (C22:6 in kidney), implicating a constitutive and highly active pathway for NAT metabolism in which FAAH plays an integral part. Interestingly, NATs were found to activate multiple members of the transient receptor potential (TRP) family of calcium channels, including TRPV1 and TRPV4, which are both expressed in kidney. The dramatic elevation in endogenous levels of NATs following acute or chronic inactivation of FAAH, in conjunction with the pharmacological effects of these lipids on TRP channels, suggests the existence of a second major lipid signaling system regulated by FAAH in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
A Kumar  C M Gupta 《Biochemistry》1985,24(19):5157-5163
The effect of the altered polar head group of phosphatidylcholine (PC) on its transbilayer distributions in small unilamellar vesicles containing sphingomyelin (SM) was ascertained with phospholipase A2 as the external membrane probe. These vesicles were formed by sonication and fractionated by centrifugation. The vesicle size was determined by gel-permeation chromatography and solute entrapment. Experiments were done to confirm that phospholipase A2 treatments did not induce fusion, lyse the vesicles, or cause PC to migrate across the vesicle bilayer. The complete degradation of external PC in intact vesicles was assured by carrying out the enzyme reactions in the absence as well as in the presence of 9.2 X 10(-5) M bovine serum albumin. In small vesicles comprised of SM and 30 mol % 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), DPPC preferentially distributed in the inner monolayer. This preference of DPPC in these vesicles disappeared upon introducing one C2H5 group at the carbon atom adjacent to the quaternary ammonium residue in its polar head group and was reversed when the C2H5 group was replaced by C6H5 and C6H5CH2 substituents or when the P-N distance was increased. These results indicate that the effective polar head-group volume is an important factor in determining the phospholipid distributions across the small vesicle bilayer.  相似文献   

7.
Patricelli MP  Cravatt BF 《Biochemistry》2001,40(20):6107-6115
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is a mammalian integral membrane enzyme that catabolizes several neuromodulatory fatty acid amides, including the endogenous cannabinoid anandamide and the sleep-inducing lipid oleamide. FAAH belongs to a large group of hydrolytic enzymes termed the amidase signature (AS) family that is defined by a conserved, linear AS sequence of approximately 130 amino acids. Members of the AS family display strikingly different substrate selectivities, yet the primary structural regions responsible for defining substrate recognition in these enzymes remain unknown. In this study, a series of unbranched p-nitroanilide (pNA) substrates ranging from 6 to 20 carbons in length was used to probe the acyl chain binding specificity of FAAH, revealing that this enzyme exhibits a strong preference for acyl chains 9 carbons in length or longer. A fluorophosphonate inhibitor of FAAH containing a photoactivatable benzophenone group was synthesized and used to locate a region of the enzyme implicated in substrate binding. Protease digestion and mass spectrometry analysis of FAAH-inhibitor conjugates identified the major site of cross-linking as residues 487-493. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that a single residue in this region, I491, strongly influenced substrate specificity of FAAH. For example, an I491A mutant displayed a greatly reduced binding affinity for medium-chain pNA substrates (7-12 carbons) but maintained nearly wild-type binding and catalytic constants for longer chain substrates (14-20 carbons). Mutation of I491 to aromatic or more polar residues generated enzymes with relative hydrolytic efficiencies for medium- versus long-chain pNAs that varied up to 90-fold. Collectively, these studies indicate that I491 participates in hydrophobic binding interactions with medium-chain FAAH substrates. Additionally, the significant changes in substrate selectivity achieved by single amino acid changes suggest that FAAH possesses a rather malleable substrate binding domain and may serve, along with other AS enzymes, as a template for the engineering of amidases with novel and/or tailored specificities.  相似文献   

8.

Background

The antifungal compound ketoconazole has, in addition to its ability to interfere with fungal ergosterol synthesis, effects upon other enzymes including human CYP3A4, CYP17, lipoxygenase and thromboxane synthetase. In the present study, we have investigated whether ketoconazole affects the cellular uptake and hydrolysis of the endogenous cannabinoid receptor ligand anandamide (AEA).

Methodology/Principal Findings

The effects of ketoconazole upon endocannabinoid uptake were investigated using HepG2, CaCo2, PC-3 and C6 cell lines. Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) activity was measured in HepG2 cell lysates and in intact C6 cells. Ketoconazole inhibited the uptake of AEA by HepG2 cells and CaCo2 cells with IC50 values of 17 and 18 µM, respectively. In contrast, it had modest effects upon AEA uptake in PC-3 cells, which have a low expression of FAAH. In cell-free HepG2 lysates, ketoconazole inhibited FAAH activity with an IC50 value (for the inhibitable component) of 34 µM.

Conclusions/Significance

The present study indicates that ketoconazole can inhibit the cellular uptake of AEA at pharmacologically relevant concentrations, primarily due to its effects upon FAAH. Ketoconazole may be useful as a template for the design of dual-action FAAH/CYP17 inhibitors as a novel strategy for the treatment of prostate cancer.  相似文献   

9.
Two putative endocannabinoids, N-arachidonylethanolamine (AEA) and 2-arachidonylglycerol, are inactivated by removal from the extracellular environment by a process that has the features of protein-mediated facilitated diffusion. We have synthesized and studied 22 N-linked analogues of arachidonylamide for the purpose of increasing our understanding of the structural requirements for the binding of ligands to the AEA transporter. We have also determined the affinities of these analogues for both the CB(1) cannabinoid receptor and fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). We have identified several structural features that enhance binding to the AEA transporter in cerebellar granule cells. We have confirmed the findings of others that replacing the ethanolamine head group with 4-hydroxybenzyl results in a high-affinity ligand for the transporter. However, we find that the same molecule is also a competitive inhibitor of FAAH. Similarly, replacement of the ethanolamine of AEA with 3-pyridinyl also results in a high-affinity inhibitor of both the transporter and FAAH. We conclude that the structural requirements for ligand binding to the CB(1) receptor and binding to the transporter are very different; however, the transporter and FAAH share most, but not all, structural requirements.  相似文献   

10.
Anandamide is an endogenous compound that acts as an agonist at cannabinoid receptors. It is inactivated via intracellular degradation after its uptake into cells by a carrier-mediated process that depends upon a concentration gradient. The fate of anandamide in those cells containing an amidase called fatty-acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is hydrolysis to arachidonic acid and ethanolamine. The active site nucleophilic serine of FAAH is inactivated by a variety of inhibitors including methylarachidonylfluorophosphonate (MAFP) and palmitylsulfonyl fluoride. In the current report, the net uptake of anandamide in cultured neuroblastoma (N18) and glioma (C6) cells, which contain FAAH, was decreased by nearly 50% after 6 min of incubation in the presence of MAFP. Uptake in laryngeal carcinoma (Hep2) cells, which lack FAAH, is not inhibited by MAFP. Free anandamide was found in all MAFP-treated cells and in control Hep2 cells, whereas phospholipid was the main product in N18 and C6 control cells when analyzed by TLC. The intracellular concentration of anandamide in N18, C6, and Hep2 cells was up to 18-fold greater than the extracellular concentration of 100 nm, which strongly suggests that it is sequestered within the cell by binding to membranes or proteins. The accumulation of anandamide and/or its breakdown products was found to vary among the different cell types, and this correlated approximately with the amount of FAAH activity, suggesting that the breakdown of anandamide is in part a driving force for uptake. This was shown most clearly in Hep2 cells transfected with FAAH. The uptake in these cells was 2-fold greater than in vector-transfected or untransfected Hep2 cells. Therefore, it appears that FAAH inhibitors reduce anandamide uptake by cells by shifting the anandamide concentration gradient in a direction that favors equilibrium. Because inhibition of FAAH increases the levels of extracellular anandamide, it may be a useful target for the design of therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

11.

Background

Combined fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) and cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibition is a promising approach for pain-relief. The Flu-AM1 and Ibu-AM5 derivatives of flurbiprofen and ibuprofen retain similar COX-inhibitory properties and are more potent inhibitors of FAAH than the parent compounds. However, little is known as to the nature of their interaction with FAAH, or to the importance of their chirality. This has been explored here.

Methodology/Principal Findings

FAAH inhibitory activity was measured in rat brain homogenates and in lysates expressing either wild-type or FAAHT488A-mutated enzyme. Molecular modelling was undertaken using both docking and molecular dynamics. The (R)- and (S)-enantiomers of Flu-AM1 inhibited rat FAAH with similar potencies (IC50 values of 0.74 and 0.99 μM, respectively), whereas the (S)-enantiomer of Ibu-AM5 (IC50 0.59 μM) was more potent than the (R)-enantiomer (IC50 5.7 μM). Multiple inhibition experiments indicated that both (R)-Flu-AM1 and (S)-Ibu-AM5 inhibited FAAH in a manner mutually exclusive to carprofen. Computational studies indicated that the binding site for the Flu-AM1 and Ibu-AM5 enantiomers was located between the acyl chain binding channel and the membrane access channel, in a site overlapping the carprofen binding site, and showed a binding mode in line with that proposed for carprofen and other non-covalent ligands. The potency of (R)-Flu-AM1 was lower towards lysates expressing FAAH mutated at the proposed carprofen binding area than in lysates expressing wild-type FAAH.

Conclusions/Significance

The study provides kinetic and structural evidence that the enantiomers of Flu-AM1 and Ibu-AM5 bind in the substrate channel of FAAH. This information will be useful in aiding the design of novel dual-action FAAH: COX inhibitors.  相似文献   

12.
K L Kelly  J M Mato  L Jarett 《FEBS letters》1986,209(2):238-242
A phospholipid has been purified from rat liver membranes which copurified with an insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid isolated from H35 hepatoma cells. The polar head group of this phospholipid was generated by treatment with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Staphylococcus aureus and purified through a C18 extraction column. Like insulin, the addition of this polar head group to isolated rat adipocytes inhibited the stimulatory effect of isoproterenol on phospholipid methyltransferase. The polar head group was also active on a subcellular fraction. The addition of the polar head group to microsomes isolated from isoproterenol-treated adipocytes produced a time-dependent inactivation of phospholipid methyltransferase, approaching basal activity. It is proposed that the effects of insulin on phospholipid methyltransferase may be mediated by this polar head group.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of intact human neuroblastoma CHP100 cells with anandamide (arachidonoylethanolamide, AEA) or 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) inhibits intracellular fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). This effect was not associated with covalent modifications of FAAH, since specific inhibitors of farnesyltransferase, kinases, phosphatases, glycosyltransferase or nitric oxide synthase were ineffective. Electrophoretic analysis of (33)P-labelled proteins, Western blot with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies, and glycan analysis of cellular proteins confirmed the absence of covalent modifications of FAAH. The inhibition by AEA was paralleled by an increased arachidonate release, which was not observed upon treatment of cells with linoleoylethanolamide, palmitoylethanolamide, or oleoylethanolamide. Moreover, cell treatment with AEA or 2-AG increased the activity of cyclooxygenase and 5-lipoxygenase, and the hydro(pero)xides generated from arachidonate by lipoxygenase were shown to inhibit FAAH, with inhibition constants in the low micromolar range. Consistently, inhibitors of 5-lipoxygenase, but not those of cyclooxygenase, significantly counteracted the inhibition of FAAH by AEA or 2-AG.  相似文献   

14.
A novel fluorescent assay to continuously monitor fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) activity that is simple, sensitive, and amenable to high-throughput screening (HTS) of compound libraries is described in this article. Stable Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines expressing either human FAAH or an inactive mutant, FAAH-S241A, were established. Arachidonyl 7-amino, 4-methyl coumarin amide (AAMCA), a novel fluorogenic substrate for FAAH, was designed and synthesized. FAAH catalyzes the hydrolysis of AAMCA to generate arachidonic acid and a highly fluorescent 7-amino, 4-methyl coumarin (AMC). The assay was done at 25 degrees C by incubating whole cell or microsomal preparations from FAAH-expressing cells with AAMCA. Release of AMC was monitored continuously using a fluorometer. Microsomal FAAH catalyzed the hydrolysis of AAMCA with an apparent K(m) of 0.48muM and V(max) of 58pmolmin(-1)mgprotein(-1). The assay is specific for FAAH given that microsomes prepared from cells expressing FAAH-S241A or vector alone had no significant activity against AAMCA. Furthermore, the activity was inhibited by URB-597, an FAAH-specific inhibitor, in a concentration-dependent manner with an IC(50) of 33.5nM. The assay was optimized for HTS and had a Z' value ranging from 0.7 to 0.9. The assay is also compatible with ex vivo analysis of FAAH activity.  相似文献   

15.
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is an integral membrane enzyme that degrades the fatty acid amide family of signaling lipids, including the endocannabinoid anandamide. Genetic or pharmacological inactivation of FAAH leads to analgesic, anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, and antidepressant phenotypes in rodents without showing the undesirable side effects observed with direct cannabinoid receptor agonists, indicating that FAAH may represent an attractive therapeutic target for treatment of pain, inflammation, and other central nervous system disorders. However, the FAAH inhibitors reported to date lack drug-like pharmacokinetic properties and/or selectivity. Herein we describe piperidine/piperazine ureas represented by N-phenyl-4-(quinolin-3-ylmethyl)piperidine-1-carboxamide (PF-750) and N-phenyl-4-(quinolin-2-ylmethyl)piperazine-1-carboxamide (PF-622) as a novel mechanistic class of FAAH inhibitors. PF-750 and PF-622 show higher in vitro potencies than previously established classes of FAAH inhibitors. Rather unexpectedly based on the high chemical stability of the urea functional group, PF-750 and PF-622 were found to inhibit FAAH in a time-dependent manner by covalently modifying the enzyme's active site serine nucleophile. Activity-based proteomic profiling revealed that PF-750 and PF-622 were completely selective for FAAH relative to other mammalian serine hydrolases. We hypothesize that this remarkable specificity derives, at least in part, from FAAH's special ability to function as a C(O)-N bond hydrolase, which distinguishes it from the vast majority of metabolic serine hydrolases in mammals that are restricted to hydrolyzing esters and/or thioesters. The piperidine/piperazine urea may thus represent a privileged chemical scaffold for the synthesis of FAAH inhibitors that display an unprecedented combination of potency and selectivity for use as potential analgesic and anxiolytic/antidepressant agents.  相似文献   

16.
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), the enzyme responsible for terminating signaling by the endocannabinoid anandamide, plays an important role in the endocannabinoid system, and FAAH inhibitors are attractive drugs for pain, addiction, and neurological disorders. The synthesis, radiosynthesis, and evaluation, in vitro and ex vivo in rat, of an 18F-radiotracer designed to image FAAH using positron emission tomography (PET) is described.Fluorine-18 labelled 3-(4,5-dihydrooxazol-2-yl)phenyl (5-fluoropentyl)carbamate, [18F]5, was synthesized at high specific activity in a one-pot three step reaction using a commercial module with a radiochemical yield of 17–22% (from [18F]fluoride). In vitro assay using rat brain homogenates showed that 5 inhibited FAAH in a time-dependent manner, with an IC50 value of 0.82 nM after a preincubation of 60 min. Ex vivo biodistribution studies and ex vivo autoradiography in rat brain demonstrated that [18F]5 had high brain penetration with standard uptake values of up to 4.6 and had a regional distribution which correlated with reported regional FAAH enzyme activity. Specificity of binding to FAAH with [18F]5 was high (>90%) as demonstrated by pharmacological challenges with potent and selective FAAH inhibitors and was irreversible as demonstrated by radioactivity measurements on homogenized brain tissue extracts.We infer from these results that [18F]5 is a highly promising candidate radiotracer with which to image FAAH in human subjects using PET and clinical studies are proceeding.  相似文献   

17.
Cannabinoid agonist inhibits gastrointestinal motility. The endocannabinoid, anandamide, is inactivated by fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). A single nucleotide polymorphism in the human FAAH gene (C385A) reduces FAAH expression. Our aim was to evaluate associations between FAAH genotype variation and symptom phenotype, gastric emptying and volume, colonic transit, and rectal sensation in patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID). 482 FGID patients [Rome II positive, 159 constipation disorders, 184 diarrhea disorders (D-IBS), 86 mixed bowel function (M-IBS), 20 chronic abdominal pain (CAP), 33 functional dyspepsia], and 252 healthy volunteers (HV) underwent questionnaires and studies of phenotype and genotype from 2000 to 2007: 250 gastric emptying, 210 fasting and postprandial gastric volume, 152 colonic transit, and 123 rectal sensation. All had FAAH genotype [CC vs. polymorphic (CA/AA)] determined by TaqMan. FAAH genotype distribution of FGID patients and HV did not deviate from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. There was a significant association of FAAH genotype with FGID phenotype (overall chi(2), P = 0.011) and with specific individual phenotypes (P = 0.048). Thus FAAH CA/AA increases the odds (relative to HV) for D-IBS (P = 0.008), M-IBS (P = 0.012), and, possibly, CAP (P = 0.055). There was a significant association of FAAH CA/AA genotype with accelerated colonic transit in D-IBS (P = 0.037). There was no association of FAAH genotype with rectal sensation thresholds or ratings. The association of genetic variation in metabolism of endocannabinoids with symptom phenotype in D-IBS and M-IBS and with faster colonic transit in D-IBS supports the hypothesis that cannabinoid mechanisms may play a role in the control of colonic motility in humans and deserve further study.  相似文献   

18.
  1. The mechanism of anandamide uptake and disposal has been an issue of considerable debate in the cannabinoid field. Several compounds have been reported to inhibit anandamide uptake or fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH; the primary catabolic enzyme of anandamide) activity with varying degrees of potency and selectivity. We recently reported the first evidence of a binding site involved in the uptake of endocannabinoids that is independent from FAAH. There are no direct comparisons of purported selective inhibitory compounds in common assay conditions measuring anandamide uptake, FAAH activity and binding activity.2. A subset of compounds reported in the literature were tested in our laboratory under common assay conditions to measure their ability to (a) inhibit [14C]-anandamide uptake in cells containing (RBL-2H3) or cells lacking (HeLa) FAAH, (b) inhibit purified FAAH hydrolytic activity, and (c) inhibit binding to a putative binding site involved in endocannabinoid transport in both RBL and HeLa cell membranes.3. Under these conditions, nearly all compounds tested inhibited (a) uptake of [14C]-anandamide, (b) enzyme activity in purified FAAH preparations, and (c) radioligand binding of [3H]-LY2183240 in RBL and HeLa plasma membrane preparations. General rank order potency was preserved within the three assays. However, concentration response curves were right-shifted for functional [14C]-anandamide uptake in HeLa (FAAH−/−) cells.4. A more direct comparison of multiple inhibitors could be made in these three assay systems performed in the same laboratory, revealing more information about the selectivity of these compounds and the relationship between the putative endocannabinoid transport protein and FAAH. At least two separate proteins appear to be involved in uptake and degradation of anandamide. The most potent inhibitory compounds were right-shifted when transport was measured in HeLa (FAAH−/−) cells suggesting a requirement for a direct interaction with the FAAH protein to maintain high affinity binding of anandamide or inhibitors to the putative anandamide transport protein.  相似文献   

19.
N-arachidonylethanolamine (AEA) accumulates during brain injury and postmortem. Because fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) regulates brain AEA content, the purpose of this study was to determine its role in the postmortal accumulation of AEA using FAAH null mice. As expected, AEA content in immediately frozen brain tissue was significantly greater in FAAH-deficient (FAAH-/-) than in wild-type mice. However, AEA content was significantly lower in brains from FAAH-/- mice at 5 and 24 h postmortem. Similarly, wild-type mice treated in vivo with a FAAH inhibitor (URB532) had significantly lower brain AEA content 24 h postmortem compared with controls. These data indicate that FAAH contributes significantly to the postmortal accumulation of AEA. In contrast, the accumulations of two other N-acylethanolamines, N-oleoylethanolamine (OEA) and N-palmitoylethanolamine (PEA), were not reduced at 24 h postmortem in either the FAAH-/- mice or mice treated with URB532. FAAH-/- mice accumulated significantly less ethanolamine at 24 h postmortem compared with wild-type mice, suggesting that FAAH activity plays a role in the accumulation of ethanolamine postmortem. These data demonstrate that FAAH activity differentially affects AEA and OEA/PEA contents postmortem and suggest that AEA formation specifically occurs via an ethanolamine-dependent route postmortem.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

Nucleic acids incorporating C5-propynepyrimidines have significantly-increased stability which is valuable for antisense applications. Crystal structures of four variants of the d(ACCGGCCGGT) decamer, with each cytosine individually replaced by a C5-propynecytosine (abbreviated Y), have been analyzed at high resolution in an attempt to understand the structural basis of the stabilization effect by this novel chemical modification. The five independent NpY dinucleotide steps in these four structures show that the hydrophobic propyne group is extensively stacked with the 5′-side base. A model of the poly(purine):poly(C5-propynepyrimidine) A-DNA duplex shows that the deep major groove is substantially filled up by the C5-propyne groups from the poly(C5-propynepyrimidine) strand, displacing many water molecules. These observations may explain the enhanced stability of the duplex incorporating C5-propynepyrimidines.  相似文献   

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