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Role of fatty acid-binding protein in lipid metabolism of insect flight muscle
Authors:Dick J van der Horst  Jan M van Doorn  Paul C C M Passier  Michael M Vork  Jan F C Glatz
Institution:(1) Department of Experimental Zoology, University of Utrecht, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Physiology, University of Limburg, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands
Abstract: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 mgrM) 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.
Keywords:lipid transport  fatty acid-binding protein  insect flight muscle  lipoproteins  insect development
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