Functional Characterization of Mammalian Mitochondrial Carnitine Palmitoyltransferases I and II Expressed in the Yeast Pichia pastoris

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Functional Characterization of Mammalian Mitochondrial Carnitine Palmitoyltransferases I and II Expressed in the Yeast Pichia pastoris
المؤلفون: Hongfa Zhu, Dennis N. Arvidson, Jianying Shi, Gebre Woldegiorgis
المصدر: The Journal of Nutrition. 130:310S-314S
بيانات النشر: Elsevier BV, 2000.
سنة النشر: 2000
مصطلحات موضوعية: Coenzyme A, Molecular Sequence Data, Medicine (miscellaneous), Biology, Pichia, Pichia pastoris, chemistry.chemical_compound, Acyl-CoA, Animals, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, Carnitine O-palmitoyltransferase, Beta oxidation, Histidine, Binding Sites, Nutrition and Dietetics, Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase, Fatty Acids, Malonyl Coenzyme A, biology.organism_classification, Molecular biology, Mitochondria, Malonyl-CoA, Biochemistry, chemistry, lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
الوصف: Mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferases I and II (CPTI and CPTII), together with the carnitine carrier, transport long-chain fatty acyl-CoA from the cytosol to the mitochondrial matrix for beta-oxidation. Recent progress in the expression of CPTI and CPTII cDNA clones in Pichia pastoris, a yeast with no endogenous CPT activity, has greatly facilitated the characterization of these important enzymes in fatty acid oxidation. It is now well established that yeast-expressed CPTI is a catalytically active, malonyl CoA-sensitive, distinct enzyme that is reversibly inactivated by detergents. CPTII is a catalytically active, malonyl CoA-insensitive, distinct enzyme that is detergent stable. Reconstitution studies with yeast-expressed CPTI have established for the first time that detergent inactivation of CPTI is reversible, suggesting that CPTI is active only in a membrane environment. By constructing a series of deletion mutants of the N-terminus of liver CPTI, we have mapped the residues essential for malonyl CoA inhibition and binding to the conserved first six N-terminal amino acid residues. Mutation of glutamic acid 3 to alanine abolished malonyl CoA inhibition and high affinity malonyl CoA binding, but not catalytic activity, whereas mutation of histidine 5 to alanine caused partial loss in malonyl CoA inhibition. Our mutagenesis studies demonstrate that glutamic acid 3 and histidine 5 are necessary for malonyl CoA inhibition and binding to liver CPTI, but not catalytic activity.
تدمد: 0022-3166
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::d1347d63c193c1f468d5a6006f60bca4Test
https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/130.2.310sTest
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....d1347d63c193c1f468d5a6006f60bca4
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE