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Query: EC:1.3.1.8 (
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
)
785
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
flavoprotein
pig kidney general
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
contains a single catalytically essential methionine residue/FAD which reacts with iodoacetate at pH 6.6. S-Carboxymethylation of this residue generates an inactive enzyme derivative which retains FAD and the tetrameric structure of the native protein. The derivative binds actanoyl-CoA and palmityol-CoA with concomitant perturbation of the flavin chromophore, but the characterisitic spectrum of the reduced enzyme-enoyl-CoA complex is not observed. In addition, octanyol-CoA strongly protects the native enzyme against alkylation with iodoacetate. These results suggest that the methionine residue is within the active center of
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
. Carboxymethylation of this residue may disrupt the precise orientation of the substrate required to achieve transfer of reducing equivalents to the flavin. Pig kidney general
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
does not contain exposed catalytically essential cysteine residues.
...
PMID:An essential methionine in pig kidney general acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. 745 27
A 62-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of easy fatigability of the lower limbs during walking. The biopsied muscle specimen showed excessive lipid accumulation. The carnitine concentration in the muscle was at the lower level of the normal range. Organic acid urinalysis was consistent with the diagnosis of multiple
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
deficiency or glutaric acidemia type II. In cultured lymphoblastoid cells from this patient there was impaired beta-oxidation, but the activities of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases were normal. Riboflavin therapy resulted in a dramatic improvement in both clinical and biochemical aspects. In this patient, the defect in coenzyme binding to electron transfer
flavoprotein
(ETF) or ETF-dehydrogenase was suspected. In the adult case of lipid storage myopathy, multiple
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
deficiency should be suspected as one of its pathogenesis and riboflavin therapy should be considered.
...
PMID:A riboflavin-responsive lipid storage myopathy due to multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency: an adult case. 785 27
Short chain (SCAD), medium chain (MCAD), and long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases (LCAD) catalyze the first step of fatty acid oxidation, while isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD) is involved in leucine oxidation. They are homologous flavoproteins belonging to the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
ACD
) family. Electron transfer
flavoprotein
(ETF) serves as an obligatory electron acceptor for these reactions. We demonstrated that the expression of SCAD, MCAD, and LCAD and the alpha-subunit of ETF (alpha-ETF) showed a similar developmental pattern, while that of IVD was distinctly different from others. The ontogenic pattern of each enzyme in the liver differed distinctly from that in the heart. The degree of glucagon-enhanced
ACD
expression in vivo and in vitro in both the liver and heart was especially high in fasted rats. Dexamethasone induced all
ACD
mRNAs in the heart. In contrast, it strongly suppressed mRNAs of all ACDs and alpha-ETF mRNA in the liver, except IVD mRNA. Dexamethasone induced IVD mRNA in both the liver and heart. Starvation strongly stimulated expression of all five genes in various tissues, with the highest in the heart, except the IVD gene which was down-regulated. The degree of induction by 3-day starvation differed in different age groups of rats. Feeding the rats a fat-free diet for 7 days caused a marked increase of IVD mRNA in the heart, whereas the high fat diet for the same period resulted in a severe decrease of the same degree, suggesting a protein-sparing mechanism. However, these manipulations of dietary fat content had little effect on the expression of other
ACD
genes.
...
PMID:Developmental, nutritional, and hormonal regulation of tissue-specific expression of the genes encoding various acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and alpha-subunit of electron transfer flavoprotein in rat. 822 58
The acyl-CoA dehydrogenases (ACDs) are mitochondrial enzymes that dehydrogenate acyl-coenzyme A esters of different chain lengths. Inherited deficiencies of these dehydrogenases are commonly associated with muscle weakness and lipid storage. Numerous assays including spectrophotometric, fluorometric, chemical, and radiochemical procedures have been used, but there is need for a rapid, reproducible assay for the different acyl-CoA dehydrogenases in small frozen samples of human muscle biopsies. We describe a comparative study of dye-linked spectrophotometric assays of the long, medium, and short chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases in frozen rat and human muscle samples. An optimal procedure is described confirming the value of glass-glass homogenization and assay of a 600g supernatant. Higher activities for all acyl-CoA dehydrogenases, citrate synthase, and cytochrome c oxidase were obtained in rat in contrast to human. The substrate-linked dye reduction method was found superior to the ferricenium or electron transfer
flavoprotein
acceptor systems. Application of the phenazine ethosulfate-DCPIP-linked method to medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) was studied in detail and the effect of immunoprecipitation of MCAD allowed for the determination of substrate specificity and the degree of crossover between long-, medium-, and short-chain
ACD
activity following immunoprecipitation. Finally, a comparison of the specificity and validity of the assay in a patient with MCAD deficiency was performed.
...
PMID:Assay of acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity in frozen muscle biopsies: application to medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency. 834 79
2-Pentynoyl-CoA is a mechanism-based inactivator of the
flavoprotein
short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from pig liver. Inactivation is associated with the formation of an intermediate absorbing at 800 nm and results in the incorporation of 0.86 +/- 0.13 molecules of radiolabeled inhibitor per subunit. A rapid procedure was devised to isolate the labeled peptide. A glutamate residue was identified as the target of 2-pentynoyl-CoA treatment and proved homologous to the proposed catalytic base, GLU376, in the corresponding medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase sequence. These results are discussed in terms of the lack of conservation of this glutamate residue in the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
enzyme family.
...
PMID:Inactivation of short-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase from pig liver by 2-pentynoyl-coenzyme A. 837 83
Mammalian electron transfer flavoproteins (ETF) are heterodimers containing a single equivalent of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). They function as electron shuttles between primary
flavoprotein
dehydrogenases involved in mitochondrial fatty acid and amino acid catabolism and the membrane-bound electron transfer flavoprotein ubiquinone oxidoreductase. The structure of human ETF solved to 2.1-A resolution reveals that the ETF molecule is comprised of three distinct domains: two domains are contributed by the alpha subunit and the third domain is made up entirely by the beta subunit. The N-terminal portion of the alpha subunit and the majority of the beta subunit have identical polypeptide folds, in the absence of any sequence homology. FAD lies in a cleft between the two subunits, with most of the FAD molecule residing in the C-terminal portion of the alpha subunit. Alignment of all the known sequences for the ETF alpha subunits together with the putative FixB gene product shows that the residues directly involved in FAD binding are conserved. A hydrogen bond is formed between the N5 of the FAD isoalloxazine ring and the hydroxyl side chain of alpha T266, suggesting why the pathogenic mutation, alpha T266M, affects ETF activity in patients with glutaric acidemia type II. Hydrogen bonds between the 4'-hydroxyl of the ribityl chain of FAD and N1 of the isoalloxazine ring, and between alpha H286 and the C2-carbonyl oxygen of the isoalloxazine ring, may play a role in the stabilization of the anionic semiquinone. With the known structure of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
, we hypothesize a possible structure for docking the two proteins.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of human electron transfer flavoprotein to 2.1-A resolution. 896 55
Threonine 244 in the alpha subunit of Paracoccus denitrificans transfer
flavoprotein
(ETF) lies seven residues to the amino terminus of a proposed dinucleotide binding motif for the ADP moiety of the FAD prosthetic group. This residue is highly conserved in the alpha subunits of all known ETFs, and the most frequent pathogenic mutation in human ETF encodes a methionine substitution at the corresponding position, alphaT266. The X-ray crystal structures of human and P. denitrificans ETFs are very similar. The hydroxyl hydrogen and a backbone amide hydrogen of alphaT266 are hydrogen bonded to N(5) and C(4)O of the flavin, respectively, and the corresponding alphaT244 has the same structural role in P. denitrificans ETF. We substituted a methionine for T244 in the alpha subunit of P. denitrificans ETF and expressed the mutant ETF in Escherichia coli. The mutant protein was purified, characterized, and compared with wild type P. denitrificans ETF. The mutation has no significant effect on the global structure of the protein as inferred from visible and near-ultraviolet absorption and circular dichroism spectra, far-ultraviolet circular dichroism spectra, and infrared spectra in 1H2O and 2H2O. Intrinsic fluorescence due to tryptophan of the mutant protein is 60% greater than that of the wild type ETF. This increased tryptophan fluorescence is probably due to a change in the environment of the nearby W239. Tyrosine fluorescence is unchanged in the mutant protein, although two tyrosine residues are close to the site of the mutation. These results indicate that a change in structure is minor and localized. Kinetic constants of the reductive half-reaction of ETF with porcine medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
are unaltered when alphaT244M ETF serves as the substrate; however, the mutant ETF fails to exhibit saturation kinetics when the semiquinone form of the protein is used as the substrate in the disproportionation reaction catalyzed by P. denitrificans electron transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO). The redox behavior of the mutant ETF was also altered as determined from the equilibrium constant of the disproportionation reaction. The separation of flavin redox potentials between the oxidized/semiquinone couple and semiquinone/hydroquinone couple are -6 mV in the wild type ETF and -27 mV in the mutant ETF. The mutation does not alter the AMP content of the protein, although the extent and fidelity of AMP-dependent, in vitro renaturation of the mutant AMP-free apoETF is reduced by 57% compared to renaturation of wild type apoETF, likely due to the absence of the potential hydrogen bond donor T244.
...
PMID:alphaT244M mutation affects the redox, kinetic, and in vitro folding properties of Paracoccus denitrificans electron transfer flavoprotein. 910 14
Isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD) belongs to an important
flavoprotein
family of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases that catalyze the alpha,beta-dehydrogenation of their various thioester substrates. Although enzymes from this family share similar sequences, catalytic mechanisms, and structural properties, the position of the catalytic base in the primary sequence is not conserved. E376 has been confirmed to be the catalytic base in medium-chain (MCAD) and short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and is conserved in all members of the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
family except for IVD and long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. To understand this dichotomy and to gain a better understanding of the factors important in determining substrate specificity in this enzyme family, the three-dimensional structure of human IVD has been determined. Human IVD expressed in Escherichia coli crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group P212121 with unit cell parameters a = 94.0 A, b = 97.7 A, and c = 181.7 A. The structure of IVD was solved at 2.6 A resolution by the molecular replacement method and was refined to an R-factor of 20.7% with an Rfree of 28.8%. The overall polypeptide fold of IVD is similar to that of other members of this family for which structural data are available. The tightly bound ligand found in the active site of the structure of IVD is consistent with that of CoA persulfide. The identity of the catalytic base was confirmed to be E254, in agreement with previous molecular modeling and mutagenesis studies. The location of the catalytic residue together with a glycine at position 374, which is a tyrosine in all other members of the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
family, is important for conferring branched-chain substrate specificity to IVD.
...
PMID:Structure of human isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase at 2.6 A resolution: structural basis for substrate specificity,. 921 89
Mature medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
isolated from pig kidney (pkMCADH) and originating from mitochondria carries a phosphate group as demonstrated by 31P-NMR-spectroscopy and chemical analysis. Two broad resonances at -6.3 and -8 ppm are observed and are assigned to the pyrophosphate group of the cofactor FAD. A third, narrow resonance at 4.65 ppm indicates the presence of a phosphomonoester residue. Chemical analysis of intact pkMCADH shows the presence of 3 +/- 0.3 phosphates, those of FAD and of an additional covalently attached phosphate. With recombinant, human wild type MCADH expressed in and purified from E. coli only the two FAD phosphates (2 +/- 0.35) are found. Similarly, pkMCADH which has been converted to the apoenzyme and reconstituted to holoenzyme also contains 2 +/- 0.4 phosphates. The covalently bound phosphate can be hydrolyzed by phosphatase and subsequently removed by dialysis. The phosphate group has no detectable effect on the catalytic activity of the MCADH measured with artificial and natural electron acceptors such as pig electron transferring
flavoprotein
. However, phosphorylation has a marked effect on protein solubility which is +5-fold lower for the dephosphorylated protein.
...
PMID:Medium-chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase: evidence for phosphorylation. 942 98
Proton NMR spectra of urine from subjects with multiple
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
deficiency, caused by defects in either the electron transport
flavoprotein
or electron transport
flavoprotein
ubiquinone oxidoreductase, provide a characteristic and possibly diagnostic metabolite profile. The detection of dimethylglycine and sarcosine, intermediates in the oxidative degradation of choline, should discriminate between multiple
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
deficiency and related disorders involving fatty acid oxidation. The excretion rates of betaine, dimethylglycine (and sarcosine) in these subjects give an estimate of the minimum rates of both choline oxidation and methyl group release from betaine and reveal that the latter is comparable with the calculated total body methyl requirement in the human infant even when choline intake is very low. Our results provide a new insight into the rates of in vivo methylation in early human development.
...
PMID:Proton NMR spectroscopic analysis of multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency--capacity of the choline oxidation pathway for methylation in vivo. 963 Jun 73
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