scholarly journals Effects of glucose starvation on the oxidation of fatty acids by maize root tip mitochondria and peroxisomes: evidence for mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation and acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity in a higher plant

1993 ◽  
Vol 296 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Dieuaide ◽  
I Couée ◽  
A Pradet ◽  
P Raymond

Fatty acid beta-oxidation was studied in organellar fractions from maize root tips by h.p.l.c. and radiometric analysis of the products of incubations with [1-14C]octanoate and [1-14C]palmitate. In crude organellar fractions containing both mitochondria and peroxisomes, octanoate and palmitate beta-oxidation, as determined by the production of acetyl-CoA, was functional and, for palmitate, was activated 4-12-fold after subjecting the root tips to 48 h of glucose starvation. The sensitivity to a ‘cocktail’ of respiratory-chain inhibitors containing cyanide, azide and salicylhydroxamate depended on the conditions of incubation, with no inhibition in a medium facilitating peroxisomal beta-oxidation and a significant inhibition in a medium potentially facilitating mitochondrial beta-oxidation. Indeed, preparations of highly purified mitochondria from glucose-starved root tips were able to oxidize octanoate and palmitate to give organic acids of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. This activity was inhibited 5-10-fold by the above cocktail of respiratory-chain inhibitors, with no parallel accumulation of acetyl-CoA, thus showing that the inhibition affected beta-oxidation rather than the pathway from acetyl-CoA to the organic acids. This provides the first evidence that the complete beta-oxidation pathway from fatty acids to citrate was functional in mitochondria from a higher plant. Moreover, an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity was shown to be present in the purified mitochondria. In contrast with the peroxisomal activity, mitochondrial beta-oxidation showed the same efficiency with octanoate and palmitate and was strictly dependent on glucose starvation.


1988 ◽  
Vol 250 (3) ◽  
pp. 819-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
E P Brass ◽  
R A Beyerinck

Accumulation of propionate, or its metabolic product propionyl-CoA, can disrupt normal cellular metabolism. The present study examined the effects of propionate, or propionyl-CoA generated during the oxidation of odd-chain-length fatty acids, on hepatic oxidation of short- and medium-chain-length fatty acids. In isolated hepatocytes, ketone-body formation from odd-chain-length fatty acids was slow as compared with even-chain-length fatty acid substrates, and increased as the carbon chain length was increased from five to seven to nine. In contrast, rates of ketogenesis from butyrate, hexonoate and octanoate were all approximately equal. Propionate (10 mM) inhibited ketogenesis from butyrate, hexanoate and octanoate by 81%, 53% and 18% respectively. Addition of carnitine had no effect on ketogenesis from the even-chain-length fatty acids, but increased the rate of ketone-body formation from pentanoate (by 53%), heptanoate (by 28%) and from butyrate or hexanoate in the presence of propionate. The inhibitory effect of propionate could not be explained by shunting acetyl-CoA into the tricarboxylic acid cycle, as CO2 formation from butyrate was also decreased by propionate. Examination of the hepatocyte CoA pool during oxidation of butyrate demonstrated that addition of propionate decreased acetyl-CoA and CoA as propionyl-CoA accumulated. Addition of carnitine decreased propionyl-CoA by 50% (associated with production of propionylcarnitine) and increased acetyl-CoA and CoA. Similar changes in the CoA pool were seen during the oxidation of pentanoate. These results demonstrate that accumulation of propionyl-CoA results in inhibition of short-chain fatty acid oxidation. Carnitine can partially reverse this inhibition. Changes in the hepatocyte CoA pool are consistent with carnitine acting by generating propionylcarnitine, thereby decreasing propionyl-CoA and increasing availability of free CoA. The data provide further evidence of the potential cellular toxicity from organic acid accretion, and supports the concept that carnitine's interaction with the cellular CoA pool can have a beneficial effect on cellular metabolism and function under conditions of unusual organic acid accumulation.



2004 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 135-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hatsue WAKI ◽  
Kazuo WATANABE ◽  
Hitoshi ISHII ◽  
Yasukazu TANAKA ◽  
Seigo SHUMIYA ◽  
...  


2000 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 567-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ohlrogge ◽  
M. Pollard ◽  
X. Bao ◽  
M. Focke ◽  
T. Girke ◽  
...  

For over 25 years there has been uncertainty over the pathway from CO2, to acetyl-CoA in chloroplasts. On the one hand, free acetate is the most effective substrate for fatty acid synthesis by isolated chloroplasts, and free acetate concentrations reported in leaf tissue (0.1–1 mM) appear adequate to saturate fatty acid synthase. On the other hand, a clear mechanism to generate sufficient free acetate for fatty acid synthesis is not established and direct production of acetyl-CoA from pyruvate by a plastid pyruvate dehydrogenase seems a more simple and direct path. We have re-examined this question and attempted to distinguish between the alternatives. The kinetics of 13CO2 and 14CO2 movement into fatty acids and the absolute rate of fatty acid synthesis in leaves was determined in light and dark. Because administered 14C appears in fatty acids within < 2–3 min our results are inconsistent with a large pool of free acetate as an intermediate in leaf fatty acid synthesis. In addition, these studies provide an estimate of the turnover rate of fatty acid in leaves. Studies similar to the above are more complex in seeds, and some questions about the regulation of plant lipid metabolism seem difficult to solve using conventional biochemical or molecular approaches. For example, we have little understanding of why or how some seeds produce >50%, oil whereas other seeds store largely carbohydrate or protein. Major control over complex plant biochemical pathways may only become possible by understanding regulatory networks which provide ‘global’ control over these pathways. To begin to discover such networks and provide a broad analysis of gene expression in developing oilseeds, we have produced micro-arrays that display approx. 5000 seed-expressed Arabidopsis genes. Sensitivity of the arrays was 1–2 copies of mRNA/cell. The arrays have been hybridized with probes derived from seeds, leaves and roots, and analysis of expression ratios between the different tissues has allowed the tissue-specific expression patterns of many hundreds of genes to be described for the first time. Approx. 10% of the genes were expressed at ratios ≥ 10-fold higher in seeds than in leaves or roots. Included in this list are a large number of proteins of unknown function, and potential regulatory factors such as protein kinases, phosphatases and transcription factors. The arrays were also found to be useful for analysis of Brassica seeds.



1981 ◽  
Vol 196 (3) ◽  
pp. 803-809 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Bauché ◽  
D Sabourault ◽  
Y Giudicelli ◽  
J Nordmann ◽  
R Nordmann

To elucidate the mechanisms through which 2-mercaptoacetate administration inhibits fatty acid oxidation in the liver, the respiration rates induced by different substrates were studied polarographically in rat hepatic mitochondria isolated 3 h after 2-mercaptoacetate administration. Palmitoyl-L-carnitine oxidation was almost completely inhibited in either the absence or presence of malonate. Octanoate oxidation was also inhibited, and the intramitochondrial acyl-CoA content was markedly increased. The oxidation rate of pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate on the one hand and of 3-hydroxybutyrate, succinate and glutamate on the other was either normal or only slightly decreased. In the presence of 2,4-dinitrophenol, the extent of the inhibition of palmitoyl-L-carnitine oxidation was unchanged. All these results are consistent with the hypothesis that the 2-mercaptoacetate inhibition of fatty acid oxidation is due to an inhibition of the beta-oxidation pathway itself. Finally, the mitochondrial defect responsible for this inhibition was shown to be an inhibition of palmitoyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity (EC 1.3.99.3).



1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 518-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manfred Focke ◽  
Andrea Feld ◽  
Hartmut K. Lichtenthaler

Thiolactomycin was shown to be a potent inhibitor of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis in intact isolated chloroplasts (measured as [14C]acetate incorporation into total fatty acids). In our attempt to further localize the inhibition site we confirmed the inhibition with a fatty acid synthetase preparation, measuring the incorporation of [14C]malonyl-CoA into total fatty acids. From the two proposed enzymic targets of the fatty acid synthetase by thiolactomycin we could exclude the acetyl-CoA: ACP transacetylase. It appears that the inhibition by thiolactomycin occurs on the level of the condensing enzymes, i.e. the 3-oxoacyl-ACP synthases. We also demonstrated that the two starting enzymes of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, the acetyl-CoA synthetase and the acetyl-CoA carboxylase, are not affected by thiolactomycin.



2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiming Zhang ◽  
Mo Su ◽  
Ning Qin ◽  
Jens Nielsen ◽  
Zihe Liu

Abstract Background Saccharomyces cerevisiae is being exploited as a cell factory to produce fatty acids and their derivatives as biofuels. Previous studies found that both precursor supply and fatty acid metabolism deregulation are essential for enhanced fatty acid synthesis. A bacterial pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex expressed in the yeast cytosol was reported to enable production of cytosolic acetyl-CoA with lower energy cost and no toxic intermediate. Results Overexpression of the PDH complex significantly increased cell growth, ethanol consumption and reduced glycerol accumulation. Furthermore, to optimize the redox imbalance in production of fatty acids from glucose, two endogenous NAD+-dependent glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenases were deleted, and a heterologous NADP+-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was introduced. The best fatty acid producing strain PDH7 with engineering of precursor and co-factor metabolism could produce 840.5 mg/L free fatty acids (FFAs) in shake flask, which was 83.2% higher than the control strain YJZ08. Profile analysis of free fatty acid suggested the cytosolic PDH complex mainly resulted in the increases of unsaturated fatty acids (C16:1 and C18:1). Conclusions We demonstrated that cytosolic PDH pathway enabled more efficient acetyl-CoA provision with the lower ATP cost, and improved FFA production. Together with engineering of the redox factor rebalance, the cytosolic PDH pathway could achieve high level of FFA production at similar levels of other best acetyl-CoA producing pathways.



1982 ◽  
Vol 208 (3) ◽  
pp. 723-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
D A Shipp ◽  
M Parameswaran ◽  
I J Arinze

The capacity of foetal and neonatal liver to oxidize short-, medium- and long-chain fatty acids was studied in the guinea pig. Liver mitochondria from foetal and newborn animals were unable to synthesize ketone bodies from octanoate, but octanoylcarnitine and palmitoylcarnitine were readily ketogenic. The ketogenic capacity at 24 h after birth was as high as in adult animals. Hepatocytes isolated from term animals were unable to oxidize fatty acids, but at 6 h after birth production of 14CO2, acid-soluble products and acetoacetate from 1-14C-labelled fatty acids was 40-50% of the rates at 24 h. At 12 h of age these rates had already reached the 24 h values and did not change during suckling in the first week of life. The activities of hepatic fatty acyl-CoA synthetases, which were minimal in the foetus or at term, increased to maximal values in 12-24 h. The data show that the capacity for beta-oxidation and ketogenesis develops maximally in this species during the first 6-12 h after birth, and appears to be partly dependent on the development of fatty acid-activating enzyme.



2018 ◽  
Vol 315 (4) ◽  
pp. E496-E510 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tongxin Wang ◽  
Weilei Yao ◽  
Ji Li ◽  
Qiongyu He ◽  
Yafei Shao ◽  
...  

Hepatic metabolic syndrome is associated with inflammation, as inflammation stimulates the reprogramming of nutrient metabolism and hepatic mitochondria-generated acetyl-CoA, but how acetyl-CoA affects the reprogramming of nutrient metabolism, especially glucose and fatty acids, in the condition of inflammation is still unclear. Here, we used an acute inflammation model in which pigs were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and found that hepatic glycolysis and fatty acid oxidation are both promoted. Acetyl-proteome profiling of LPS-infected pigs liver showed that inflammatory stress exacerbates the acetylation of mitochondrial proteins. Both mitochondrial glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase 2 (GOT2) and malate dehydrogenase 2 (MDH2) were acetylated, and the malate-aspartate shuttle (MAS) activity was stimulated to maintain glycolysis. With the use of 13C-carbon tracing in vitro, acetyl-CoA was found to be mainly supplied by lipid-derived fatty acid oxidation rather than glucose-derived pyruvate oxidative decarboxylation, while glucose was mainly used for lactate production in response to inflammatory stress. The results of the mitochondrial experiment showed that acetyl-CoA directly increases MDH2 and, in turn, the GOT2 acetylation level affects MAS activity. Treatment with palmitate in primary hepatocytes from LPS-injected pigs increased the hepatic production of acetyl-CoA, pyruvate, and lactate; MAS activity; and hepatic MDH2 and GOT2 hyperacetylation, while the deficiency of long-chain acetyl-CoA dehydrogenase resulted in the stabilization of these parameters. These observations suggest that acetyl-CoA produced by fatty acid oxidation promotes MAS activity and glycolysis via nonenzymatic acetylation during the inflammatory stress response.



2013 ◽  
Vol 57 (11) ◽  
pp. 5729-5732 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua B. Parsons ◽  
Matthew W. Frank ◽  
Jason W. Rosch ◽  
Charles O. Rock

ABSTRACTInactivation of acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) carboxylase confers resistance to fatty acid synthesis inhibitors inStaphylococcus aureuson media supplemented with fatty acids. The addition ofanteiso-fatty acids (1 mM) plus lipoic acid supports normal growth of ΔaccDstrains, but supplementation with mammalian fatty acids was less efficient. Mice infected with strain RN6930 developed bacteremia, but bacteria were not detected in mice infected with its ΔaccDderivative.S. aureusbacteria lacking acetyl-CoA carboxylase can be propagatedin vitrobut were unable to proliferate in mice, suggesting that the acquisition of inactivating mutations in this enzyme is not a mechanism for the evasion of fatty acid synthesis inhibitors.



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