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1.
Fatty acid synthetase, partially purified by gel filtration with Sepharose 4B from goose liver, showed the same relative rate of incorporation of methylmalonyl-CoA (compared to malonyl-CoA) as that observed with the purified fatty acid synthetase from the uropygial gland. In the presence of acetyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA was incorporated mainly into 2,4,6,8-tetramethyldecanoic acid and 2,4,6,8,10-pentamethyl-dodecanoic acid by the enzyme from both sources. Methylmalonyl-CoA was a competitive inhibitor with respect to malonyl-CoA for the enzyme from the gland just as previously observed for fatty acid synthetase from other animals. Furthermore, rabbit antiserum prepared against the gland enzyme cross-reacted with the liver enzyme, and Ouchterlony double-diffusion analyses showed complete fusion of the immunoprecipitant lines. The antiserum inhibited both the synthesis of n-fatty acids and branched fatty acids catalyzed by the synthetase from both liver and the uropygial gland. These results suggest that the synthetases from the two tissues are identical and that branched and n-fatty acids are synthesized by the same enzyme. Immunological examination of the 105,000g supernatant prepared from a variety of organs from the goose showed that only the uropygial gland contained a protein which cross-reacted with the antiserum prepared against malonyl-CoA decarboxylase purified from the gland. Thus, it is concluded that the reason for the synthesis of multimethyl-branched fatty acids by the fatty acid synthetase in the gland is that in this organ the tissue-specific and substrate-specific decarboxylase makes only methylmalonyl-CoA available to the synthetase. Fatty acid synthetase, partially purified from the mammary gland and the liver of rats, also catalyzed incorporation of [methyl-14C]methylmalonyl-CoA into 2,4,6,8-tetramethyldecanoic acid and 2,4,6,8-tetramethylundecanoic acid with acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA, respectively, as the primers. Evidence is also presented that fatty acids containing straight and branched regions can be generated by the fatty acid synthetase from the rat and goose, from methylmalonyl-CoA in the presence of malonyl-CoA or other precursors of n-fatty acids. These results provide support for the hypothesis that, under the pathological conditions which result in accumulation of methylmalonyl-CoA, abnormal branched acids can be generated by the fatty acid synthetase.  相似文献   

2.
An acyl coenzyme A hydrolase (thioesterase II) has been purified to near homogeneity from lactating rat mammary gland. The enzyme is a monomer of molecular weight 33,000 and contains a single active site residue. The enzyme is specific for acyl groups, as acyl-CoA thioesters, containing eight or more carbon atoms and can also hydrolyze oxygen esters. Thioesterase II is capable of shifting the product specificity of rat mammary gland fatty acid synthetase from predominately long chain fatty acids (C14, C16, and C18) to mainly medium chain fatty acids (C8, C10, and C12). Thioesterase II can restore the capacity for fatty acid synthesis to fatty acid synthetase in which the thioesterase component (thioesterase I) has been inactivated with phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride or removed by trypsinization. No evidence was found of significant levels of thioesterase II in lactating rat liver. The presence of thioesterase II in the lactating mammary gland and the ability of the enzyme to hydrolyze acyl-fatty acid synthetase thioesters of intermediate chain length, are indicative of a major role for this enzyme in the synthesis of the medium chain fatty acids characteristic of milk fat.  相似文献   

3.
Analysis of the acyl portion of the wax from the uropygial gland of muscovy duck, wood duck, (Cairininae subfamily) and Canadian goose (Anserinae) by combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry showed that 2,4,6-trimethyloctanoic acid and 2,4,6-trimethylnonanoic acid were the major (~100%) components. Similar analyses of the wax from the glands of mallard and Peking duck (Anatinae) showed that 2- and 4-mono-methylhexanoic acids predominated (>75%) with no multimethyl-branched acids. The uropygial glands of the former group contained 20 to 100 times as much malonyl-CoA decarboxylase activity as those of the latter group. These results strongly support the hypothesis that this decarboxylase, by causing specific decarboxylation of malonyl-CoA, makes available only methylmalonyl-CoA for fatty acid synthesis, and thus causes the production of multimethyl-branched acids. Malonyl-CoA decarboxylase was purified to apparent homogeniety in 30% yield from the uropygial glands of muscovy and wood ducks. Properties of the enzyme from the ducks, such as S20.w (7.8 S), molecular weight (190,000) subunit composition (4 × 47,000), amino acid composition, strict substrate specificity, pH optimum (~9.0), Km (~33 μm), V (~80 μmol/min/mg), and inhibition by SH-directed reagents were similar to those observed with the decarboxylase from the domestic goose. Antiserum prepared against the goose enzyme cross-reacted with and inhibited the decarboxylase from the four genera of ducks and Canadian goose. Ouchterlony double-diffusion analyses showed fusion of precipitant lines with the enzyme from muscovy, wood duck, and Canadian goose, whereas spurs were observed with the enzymes from mallard and Peking ducks. Immunoelectrophoresis showed that the decarboxylases from muscovy and wood ducks were similar and that they were different from the enzyme from the domestic goose. It appears that during evolution, the subfamilies (Anserinae and Cairininae) which synthesize multimethyl-branched acids acquired the ability to produce a high level of malonyl-CoA decarboxylase, an enzyme which is also present in low levels in other organisms.  相似文献   

4.
Two arginine modifying reagents, phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione, inactivated fatty acid synthetase from goose uropygial gland. This inactivation could be partially prevented by NADP, 2′-AMP, and 2′,5′-ADP, whereas acetyl-CoA and/or malonyl-CoA provided very little protection. Ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities of fatty acid synthetase showed similar inactivation by phenylglyoxal and butanedione and protection by only NADP and its 2′-phosphate-containing analogs. Furthermore, 2′-AMP was found to be a competitive inhibitor of overall fatty acid synthetase, ketoacyl reductase, and enoyl reductase with apparent Ki values of 1.4, 0.2, and 14 mm, respectively. These results suggest that binding of NADPH to fatty acid synthetase involves specific interaction of the 2′-phosphate with the guanidino group of arginine residues at the active site of the two reductases. Quantitation of the number of arginine residues modified revealed that 4 out of 106 arginine residues per subunit of the synthetase showed high reactivity toward phenylglyoxal. Scatchard analysis showed that two rapidly reacting arginine residues had no effect on the catalytic activity, while modification of two additional arginine residues resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity. Under these conditions, of the seven partial reactions of fatty acid synthetase, only the ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities were inhibited by phenylglyoxal. The differential reversal of inhibition of the two reductases and the overall activity of fatty acid synthetase, resulting from dialysis of the modified enzyme, suggested that both ketoacyl reductase sites and enoyl reductase sites are required for the full expression of fatty acid synthetase activity. The results of the present chemical modification studies are consistent with the hypothesis that each subunit of fatty acid synthetase contains one ketoacyl reductase and one enoyl reductase and suggest that one essential arginine is present at each of these active sites.  相似文献   

5.
A cloned cDNA containing the entire coding sequence for the long-chain S-acyl fatty acid synthetase thioester hydrolase (thioesterase I) component as well as the 3'-noncoding region of the fatty acid synthetase has been isolated using an expression vector and domain-specific antibodies. The coding region was assigned to the thioesterase I domain by identification of sequences coding for characterized peptide fragments, amino-terminal analysis of the isolated thioesterase I domain and the presence of the serine esterase active-site sequence motif. The thioesterase I domain is 306 amino acids long with a calculated molecular mass of 33,476 daltons; its DNA is flanked at the 5'-end by a region coding for the acyl carrier protein domain and at the 3'-end by a 1,537-base pairs-long noncoding sequence with a poly(A) tail. The thioesterase I domain exhibits a low, albeit discernible, homology with the discrete medium-chain S-acyl fatty acid synthetase thioester hydrolases (thioesterase II) from rat mammary gland and duck uropygial gland, suggesting a distant but common evolutionary ancestry for these proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction between rat mammary gland thioesterase II and fatty acid synthetase has been studied by a variety of physicochemical techniques. Pyrene-labeled thioesterase II does not exhibit increased fluorescence anisotropy when mixed with fatty acid synthetase, suggesting that the enzymes do not readily form a complex. Nevertheless, the functional interaction between the enzymes can be easily demonstrated by observing the hydrolysis, by unmodified thioesterase II, of acyl chains from their thioester linkage to the 4-phosphopantetheine of the fatty acid synthetase. This hydrolytic reaction is not inhibited even in the presence of a large excess of fatty acid synthetase with vacant 4'-phosphopantetheine thiols, indicating that interaction occurs only between thioesterase and fatty acid synthetase species which carry acyl chains on the 4'-phosphopantetheine thiols. A novel model system was devised which allowed us to explore the nature of the physical interaction between the two enzymes under conditions where the synthetase was actively engaged in acyl chain assembly. Fatty acid synthetase was treated with phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride to inhibit its resident thioesterase activity, immobilized via a specific antibody to a column of Sepharose 4B, and exposed to the substrates required for acyl-enzyme assembly. When thioesterase II was introduced to the column, it passed through unretarded even though it efficiently catalyzed hydrolysis of the immobilized S-acyl synthetase en route. These results indicate that the two enzymes associate when an acyl chain is present on the synthetase and that they dissociate rapidly following completion of the catalytic process. Thus, the mammary system differs from that of the avian uropygial gland in which the two enzymes associate to form a stable complex even in the absence of substrates.  相似文献   

7.
“Active serine” of the thioesterase domain of fatty acid synthase from the goose uropygial gland was selectively labeled with [1,3-3H]diisopropylfluorophosphate and the chymotryptic peptide containing this active serine was purified to homogeneity by a combination of gel filtration, cation exchange chromatography and high performance liquid chromatography. The primary structure of this active site peptide, Ser-Phe-Gly-Ala-Cys-Val-Ala-Phe, is remarkably homologous to the “active serine” containing peptide of human plasmin.  相似文献   

8.
We have confirmed that coenzyme A is required for rat fatty acid synthetase activity (T. C. Linn, M. J. Stark, and P. A. Srere, 1980, J. Biol. Chem.255, 1388–1392). When rat liver or mammary gland fatty acid synthetase was assayed in the presence of a CoA-scavenging system such as ATP citrate lyase, almost complete inhibition of fatty acid synthesis was observed. The inhibition was reversed by addition of CoA or pantetheine, but not by addition of N-acetylcysteamine or other thiols. In the absence of CoA, the rate of elongation of acyl moieties on both native fatty acid synthetase and fatty acid synthetase lacking the chain-terminating thioesterase I component (trypsinized fatty acid synthetase) was reduced 100-fold. All of the palmitate synthesized slowly by the CoA-depleted native multienzyme was released, by the thioesterase I component, as the free fatty acid; only shorter-chainlength acyl moieties remained bound to the enzyme. The acyl-S-multienzyme thioesters formed by the trypsinized fatty acid synthetase in the absence of CoA contained saturated moieties of chain length C6-C16; addition of CoA promoted elongation of the acyl-S-multienzyme thioesters without release from the enzyme. The transfer of acetyl and malonyl moieties from CoA to the multienzyme, the reduction of S-acetoacetyl-N-acetylcysteamine and S-crotonyl-N-acetylcysteamine, and the dehydration of S-β-hydroxybutyryl-N-acetylcysteamine, reactions catalyzed by the fatty acid synthetase, were not dependent on the presence of CoA. The hydrolysis of acyl-S-multienzyme catalyzed by thioesterase I, the resident chain-terminating component of the fatty acid synthetase, and thioesterase II, a monofunctional mammary gland chain-terminating enzyme, was also independent of CoA availability as was hydrolysis of an acyl-S-pantetheine pentapeptide isolated from the multienzyme. On the basis of these observations we conclude that CoA is required for the elongation of acyl moieties on the fatty acid synthetase but not for their release from the multienzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Malonyl-CoA decarboxylase from the uropygial gland of goose decarboxylated (R,S)-methylmalonyl-CoA at a slow rate and introduced 3H from [3H]2O into the resulting propionyl-CoA. Carboxylation of this labeled propionyl-CoA by propionyl-CoA carboxylase from pig heart and acetyl-CoA carboxylase from the uropygial gland completely removed 3H. Repeated treatment of (R,S)-[methyl-14C]methylmalonyl-CoA with the decarboxylase converted 50% of the substrate into propionyl-CoA, whereas (S)-methylmalonyl-CoA, generated by both carboxylases, was completely decarboxylated. Radioactive (R)- (S), and (R,S)-methylmalonyl-CoA were equally incorporated into fatty acids by fatty acid synthetase from the uropygial gland. The residual methylmalonyl-CoA remaining after fatty acid synthetase reaction on (R,S)-methylmalonyl-CoA was also racemic. These results show that: (a) the decarboxylase is stereospecific, (b) replacement of the carboxyl group by hydrogen occurs with retention of configuration, (c) acetyl-CoA carboxylase of the uropygial gland generates (S)-methylmalonyl-CoA from propionyl-CoA, and (d) fatty acid synthetase is not stereospecific for methylmalonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

10.
Ultracentrifugally homogeneous fatty acid synthetase was isolated from the uropygial gland of goose by a one-step purification procedure. Formation of fatty acids from malonyl-CoA and hydrolysis of palmitoyl-CoA catalyzed by the synthetase were inhibited to an equal extent by diisopropylfluorophosphate. With labeled inhibitor, it was shown that one mole of the inhibitor was covalently attached per mole of the subunit of the enzyme. Sodium dodecyl sulphate electrophoresis showed that all of the label was contained in a 270,000 M.Wt peptide. That the active serine was not at the loading site was suggested by the observations that neither acetylation nor malonylation of the enzyme affected the reaction of the enzyme with the inhibitor and acetylation or malonylation of the enzyme was not affected by this inhibitor. Thus, each fatty acid synthetase peptide is shown to have one active serine which most probably is at the chain terminating active site of the peptide.  相似文献   

11.
Malonyl-CoA decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.9) was found to be localized in the mitochondria in rat liver. Low ionic strength (10 mm Na phosphate) buffer extracted the bulk (>85%) of the enzyme from the mitochondria. From this extract the enzyme was purified over 2,000-fold using a combination of (NH4)2SO4 precipitation, gel filtration with Sepharose 4B and Sephadex G-150, ion exchange chromatography with QAE-Sephadex and CM-Sephadex, and finally chromatography on NADP-agarose. The purified enzyme, which had a specific activity of about 16 μmol/min/mg, appeared to be electrophoretically homogeneous and had a molecular weight of 160,000. The decarboxylase had a broad pH optimum between 8.5 and 10.0 and showed a typical Michaelis-Menten substrate saturation pattern from which Km and V were calculated to be 54 μm and 18.8 μmol/min/mg, respectively. This enzyme decarboxylated neither malonic acid nor methylmalonyl-CoA and was severely inhibited by thiol-directed reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide but not by iodoacetamide. Acetyl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, and methylmalonyl-CoA also inhibited the enzyme. The purified decarboxylase was immunogenic in rabbits and Ouchterlony double diffusion analysis revealed a single precipitant line with the purified enzyme. The IgG fraction isolated from the antiserum inhibited the enzyme from not only liver mitochondria but also the mammary gland, heart, and kidney of the rat. However, malonyl-CoA decarboxylase from rat brain mitochondria was not inhibited by the antibody. Malonyl-CoA decarboxylase purified from the uropygial gland of a domestic goose neither cross reacted nor was it inhibited by the antiserum prepared against the rat liver mitochondrial enzyme and the antibody against the goose enzyme neither cross-reacted nor inhibited the enzyme from the rat. It is proposed that a role for mitochondrial malonyl-CoA decarboxylase is to decarboxylate malonyl-CoA generated by propionyl-CoA carboxylase and thus protect mitochondrial enzymes susceptible to inhibition by malonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

12.
The fatty acid synthetase from lactating rat mammary gland is shown to consist of two polyfunctional polypeptides of similar molecular weight (about 220,000); a 4'-phosphopantetheine residue is covalently bound to one, or both subunits. Limited trypsinization of the fatty acid synthetase releases on enzymatically active thioesterase component which has been purified and its properties studied. The thioesterase sediments in the ultracentrifuge as a single component of molecular weight 32,000; its sedimentation coefficient is 2.9 x 10-(13) s its diffusion coefficient 5.0 x 10-(7) cm2 s-(1). The thioesterase also elutes from a column of Sephadex G-75 as a single, symmetrical peak of constant specific activity. However, electrophoresis of the denatured thioesterase in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate reveals that the enzyme has been partially nicked during isolation. The kinetic data of the enzyme reaction were studied using palmityl-CoA as a model substrate. Solvent pH was found to affect both Vmax and Km (Km = 0.5 micron at pH 6.6, 2.5 micron at pH 8.0) wereas solvent ionic strength affected Vmax but no Km. The thioesterases from the fatty acid synthetases of rat liver and lactating mammary gland have identical physical properties, identical amino acid compositions, and are immunologically indistinguishable. Both thioesterases hydrolyze long chain, in preference to short chain, thioesters of CoA, an observation consistent with their role in regulation of the chain-terminating step in fatty acid synthesis by the parent multienzyme complexes.  相似文献   

13.
Subtilisin hydrolysis of chicken liver fatty acid syntheiase yields polypeptides of molecular weights 220,000, 160,000 and 35,000. The larger peptides are further degraded to proteins of molecular weights 122,000 and 105,000. When 50% and 80% of the synthetase subunits are cleaved, there is a loss of 10% and 40% of fatty acid synthetase activity, respectively, indicating that proteolysis of the 240,000-mol. wt. subunit does not substantially affect palmitate synthesis provided that the component polypeptides remain associated with each other. Ammonium sulfate fractionation yields a fraction containing the palmitoyl thioesterase activity. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of this fraction under both nondenaturing and denaturing conditions yields one band with an estimated molecular weight of 35,000. The isolated thioesterase is specific for palmitoyl and stearoyl thioesters (myristoyl-CoA is hydrolyzed at 15% the rate of palmitoyl-CoA). The enzyme is inhibited byN-ethylmaleimide and diisopropylfluorophosphate, suggesting that both an active -SH and -OH are involved in catalysis. However, preincubation of the thioesterase with decanoly-CoA protected the enzyme against inhibition by diisopropylfluorophosphate but not byN-ethylmaleimide, suggesting that an active OH (seryl or threonyl) is involved in the hydrolysis of the palmitoyl group. This active hydroxyl group is uniquely inhibited by diisopropylfluorophosphate, as evidenced by the incorporation of 2 mol of [32P]diisopropylfluorophosphate per mole of synthetase (M r = 480,000) and the fact that all the radioactivity was associated with the isolated thioesterase. These results indicate that there are two copies of the thioesterase per mole of synthetase or one copy of the enzyme per 240,000-mol. wt. subunit.  相似文献   

14.
Acyl-CoA carboxylase was purified from the 140,000g supernatant of the goose uropygial gland extract by means of Sepharose 4B-CL gel filtration, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and affinity chromatography with monomeric avidin-Sepharose 4B-CL. The purified enzyme showed a pH optimum of 8 and had a specific activity ranging from 2–8 μmol/min/mg protein for acetyl-CoA. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-electrophoresis showed a single band corresponding to a molecular weight of 238,000. Carboxylase activity was stimulated threefold by 20 mm citrate. Maximal activity was observed with 25 mm bicarbonate, 10 mm Mg2+, 3 mm ATP, and 1 to 2 mm acyl-CoA. The enzyme carboxylated acetyl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, pentanoyl-CoA, and hexanoyl-CoA, with a V of 8.8, 5.7, 0.9, 0.04, and 0.03 μmol/min/mg, respectively; Km values for the five CoA esters were quite similar. The carboxylated products from these substrates were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. This carboxylase was inhibited by sodium and chloride ions. Chemical modification of the enzyme with pyridoxal-5′-phosphate showed inhibition of activity that was time and concentration dependent. The inhibition was reversed by dilution except when treated with sodium borohydride before dilution. Acetyl-CoA partially (40%) protected the enzyme from inhibition, whereas 3′-dephosphoacetyl-CoA, which showed a Km 3.5 times that of acetyl-CoA, was much less efficient in protecting the enzyme against inactivation by pyridoxal phosphate. These results suggest that the ?-amino group of a lysine residue is involved in binding acetyl-CoA via interaction with the 3′-phosphate. Chemical modification of the enzyme with phenylglyoxal showed inhibition of activity that was time and concentration dependent. However, none of the substrates protected the enzyme from inactivation; citrate partially protected the enzyme, possibly by changing the configuration of the enzyme. Amino acid analysis of the protein showed striking similarities with carboxylases purified from other animals. Ouchterlony double-diffusion analysis with rabbit antiserum prepared against the gland enzyme showed fusion of precipitation lines with the enzymes from goose liver and chicken liver. These results strongly support the conclusion that the uropygial gland, which synthesizes multimethyl-branched acids, employs the same carboxylase as that present in other tissues.  相似文献   

15.
Medium-chain S-acyl fatty acid synthetase thioester hydrolase (thioesterase II), a discrete monomeric enzyme of 29 kDa, regulates the product specificity of the de novo lipogenic systems in certain specialized mammalian and avian tissues, such as mammary and uropygial glands. The amino acid sequence of a 57-residue region containing the active site of the rat mammary gland enzyme has been established by a combination of amino acid and cDNA sequencing. Thioesterase II was radiolabeled with the serine esterase inhibitor [1,3-14C]diisopropyl-fluorophosphate and digested sequentially with cyanogen bromide, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease and trypsin. A radiolabeled tryptic peptide was isolated and sequenced by automated Edman degradation and the location of the active-site residue established. The amino acid sequence was confirmed by sequencing an overlapping, unlabeled peptide, obtained by V8 digestion of the whole enzyme, and by dideoxynucleotide sequencing of a thioesterase II cDNA clone isolated from a lambda gt11 expression library. The active center contains the motif Gly-Xaa-Ser-Xaa-Gly, characteristic of the serine esterase family of enzymes. A seven-residue region around the essential serine of the rat mammary thioesterase II, Phe-Gly-Met-Ser-Phe-Gly-Ser, is completely homologous with a region of the mallard uropygial thioesterase, recently analyzed by cDNA sequencing, indicating that this is likely to be the active site of the avian enzyme. Overall homology between the mammalian and avian enzymes for the 57-amino-acid residue region is 47% and suggests that the two enzymes may share a common evolutionary origin.  相似文献   

16.
The fatty acid synthetase multienzyme from lactating rat mammary gland was modified either by removal of the two thioesterase I domains with trypsin or by inhibiting the thioesterase I activity with phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride. The modified multienzymes are able to convert acetyl-CoA, malonyl-CoA, and NADPH to long chain acyl moieties (C16C22), which are covalently bound to the enzyme through thioester linkage, but they are unable to release the acyl groups as free fatty acids. A single enzyme-bound, long chain acyl thioester is formed by each molecule of modified multienzyme. Kinetic studies showed that the modified multienzymes rapidly elongate the acetyl primer moiety to a C16 thioester and that further elongation to C18, C20, and C22 is progressively slower. Thioesterase II, a mammary gland enzyme which is not part of the fatty acid synthetase multienzyme, can release the acyl moiety from its thioester linkage to either modified multienzyme. Kinetic data are consistent with the formation of an enzyme—substrate complex between thioesterase II and the acylated modified multienzymes. The present study demonstrates that the ability of thioesterase II to modify the product specificity of normal fatty acid synthetase is most likely attributable to the capacity of thioesterase II for hydrolysis of acyl moieties from thioester linkage to the multienzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Fatty acid synthetase from goose uropygial gland was inactivated by treatment with pyridoxal 5′-phosphate. Malonyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA did not protect the enzyme whereas NADPH provided about 70% protection against this inactivation. 2′-Monophospho-ADP-ribose was nearly as effective as NADPH while 2′-AMP, 5′-AMP, ADP-ribose, and NADH were ineffective suggesting that pyridoxal 5′-phosphate modified a group that interacts with the 5′-pyrophosphoryl group of NADPH and that the 2′-phosphate is necessary for the binding of the coenzyme to the enzyme. Of the seven component activities catalyzed by fatty acid synthetase only the enoyl-CoA reductase activity was inhibited. Inactivation of both the overall activity and enoyl-CoA reductase of fatty acid synthetase by this compound was reversed by dialysis or dilution but not after reduction with NaBH4. The modified protein showed a characteristic Schiff base absorption (maximum at 425 nm) that disappeared on reduction with NaBH4 resulting in a new absorption spectrum with a maximum at 325 nm. After reduction the protein showed a fluorescence spectrum with a maximum at 394 nm. Reduction of pyridoxal phosphate-treated protein with NaB3H4 resulted in incorporation of 3H into the protein and paper chromatography of the acid hydrolysate of the modified protein showed only one fluorescent spot which was labeled and ninhydrin positive and had an Rf identical to that of authentic N6-pyridoxyllysine. When [4-3H]pyridoxal phosphate was used all of the 3H, incorporated into the protein, was found in pyridoxyllysine. All of these results strongly suggest that pyridoxal phosphate inhibited fatty acid synthetase by forming a Schiff base with the ?-amino group of lysine in the enoyl-CoA reductase domain of the enzyme. The number of lysine residues modified was estimated with [4-3H]pyridoxal-5′-phosphate/NaBH4 and by pyridoxal-5′-phosphate/NaB3H4. Scatchard analysis showed that modification of two lysine residues per subunit resulted in complete inactivation of the overall activity and enoyl-CoA reductase of fatty acid synthetase. NADPH prevented the inactivation of the enzyme by protecting one of these two lysine residues from modification. The present results are consistent with the hypothesis that each subunit of the enzyme contains an enoyl-CoA reductase domain in which a lysine residue, at or near the active site, interacts with NADPH.  相似文献   

18.
Z I Randhawa  S Smith 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1365-1373
The complete amino acid sequence of the medium-chain S-acyl fatty acid synthetase thio ester hydrolase (thioesterase II) from rat mammary gland is presented. Most of the sequence was derived by analysis of peptide fragments produced by cleavage at methionyl, glutamyl, lysyl, arginyl, and tryptophanyl residues. A small section of the sequence was deduced from a previously analyzed cDNA clone. The protein consists of 260 residues and has a blocked amino-terminal methionine and calculated Mr of 29,212. The carboxy-terminal sequence, verified by Edman degradation of the carboxy-terminal cyanogen bromide fragment and carboxypeptidase Y digestion of the intact thioesterase II, terminates with a serine residue and lacks three additional residues predicted by the cDNA sequence. The native enzyme contains three cysteine residues but no disulfide bridges. The active site serine residue is located at position 101. The rat mammary gland thioesterase II exhibits approximately 40% homology with a thioesterase from mallard uropygial gland, the sequence of which was recently determined by cDNA analysis [Poulose, A.J., Rogers, L., Cheesbrough, T. M., & Kolattukudy, P. E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 15953-15958]. Thus the two enzymes may share similar structural features and a common evolutionary origin. The location of the active site in these thioesterases differs from that of other serine active site esterases; indeed, the enzymes do not exhibit any significant homology with other serine esterases, suggesting that they may constitute a separate new family of serine active site enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Wax esters of short chain acids (monomethyl-C6) constitute the major products of the uropygial gland of mallard ducks. During eclipse, the period (June and July) immediately following postnuptial molt, the production of short chain acyl groups is severely curtailed and longer chain acyl groups become the dominant components; after this period the composition reverts. These changes in composition were accompanied by corresponding changes in the level of S-acyl fatty acid synthase thioesterase activity, and the level of the immunologically detectable amount of this enzyme. In vitro translation of the poly(A)+ RNA from the gland produced a 30-kDa protein which cross-reacted with rabbit antibodies prepared against this enzyme. The level of translatable mRNA for the thioesterase in the gland dramatically decreased as the birds went into eclipse and all of these changes reverted when the eclipse period was over. These results strongly suggest that the thioesterase is involved in the production of the short chain fatty acids in vivo and that during eclipse the expression of the thioesterase gene is suppressed.  相似文献   

20.
Immunochemical procedures and limited proteolysis have been used to investigate the subunit structure of fatty acid synthetase from rat mammary gland. Specific antibodies were raised against the two thioesterase I domains obtained from the fatty acid synthetase by treatment with trypsin. The antibodies precipitated both subunits of the dissociated fatty acid synthetase, indicating that both subunits contained a single thioesterase I domain. An analysis of the time course of limited trypsinization of the fatty acid synthetase, labeled in its two thioesterase I domains with [1,3-14C] diisopropylphosphofluoridate, indicated that each subunit was susceptible to tryptic attack at identical locations and that the thioesterase I domains occupied a terminal locus at one end of each polyfunctional polypeptide chain. The most plausible explanation for these results is that the mammalian fatty acid synthetase is a homodimer.  相似文献   

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