Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.3.1.8 (
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
)
785
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
catalyzes the flavin-dependent oxidation of a variety of acyl-CoA thioesters with the transfer of reducing equivalents to electron-transferring
flavoprotein
. The binding of normal substrates profoundly suppresses the reactivity of the reduced enzyme toward molecular oxygen, whereas the oxidase reaction becomes significant using thioesters such as indolepropionyl-CoA (IP-CoA) and 4-(dimethylamino)-3-phenylpropionyl-CoA (DP-CoA). Steady-state and stopped-flow studies with IP-CoA led to a kinetic model of the oxidase reaction in which only the free reduced enzyme reacts with oxygen (Johnson, J. K., Kumar, N. R., and Srivastava, D. K. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 4738-4744). We have tested their proposal with IP-CoA and DP-CoA. The dependence of the oxidase reaction on oxygen concentration is biphasic with a major low affinity phase incompatible with a model predicting a simple Km for oxygen of 3 microM. If only free reduced enzyme reacts with oxygen, increasing IP-CoA would show strong substrate inhibition because it binds tightly to the reduced enzyme. Experimentally, IP-CoA shows simple saturation kinetics. The Glu376-Gln mutant of the medium chain dehydrogenase allows the oxygen reactivity of complexes of the reduced enzyme with IP-CoA and the corresponding product indoleacryloyl-CoA (IA-CoA) to be characterized without the subsequent redox equilibration that complicates analysis of the oxidase kinetics of the native enzyme. In sum, these data suggest that when bulky, nonphysiological substrates are employed, multiple reduced enzyme species react with molecular oxygen. The relatively high oxidase activity of the short chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from the obligate anaerobe Megasphaera elsdenii was studied by rapid reaction kinetics of wild-type and the Glu367-Gln mutant using butyryl-, crotonyl-, and 2-aza-butyryl-CoA thioesters. In marked contrast to those of the mammalian dehydrogenase, complexes of the reduced bacterial enzyme with these ligands react with molecular oxygen at rates similar to those of the free protein. Evolutionary and mechanistic aspects of the suppression of oxygen reactivity in the acyl-CoA dehydrogenases are discussed.
...
PMID:Oxidase activity of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. 967 17
Electron-transfer
flavoprotein
(ETF) serves as an intermediate electron carrier between primary
flavoprotein
dehydrogenases and terminal respiratory chains in mitochondria and prokaryotic cells. The three-dimensional structures of human and Paracoccus denitrificans ETFs determined by X-ray crystallography indicate that the 4'-hydroxyl of the ribityl side chain of FAD is hydrogen bonded to N(1) of the flavin ring. We have substituted 4'-deoxy-FAD for the native FAD and investigated the analog-containing ETF to determine the role of this rare intra-cofactor hydrogen bond. The binding constants for 4'-deoxy-FAD and FAD with the apoprotein are very similar, and the energy of binding differs by only 2 kJ/mol. The overall two-electron oxidation-reduction potential of 4'-deoxy-FAD in solution is identical to that of FAD. However, the potential of the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD is 0.116 V less than the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the native protein. These data suggest that the 4'-hydoxyl-N(1) hydrogen bond stabilizes the anionic semiquinone in which negative charge is delocalized over the N(1)-C(2)O region. Transfer of the second electron to 4'-deoxy-FAD reconstituted ETF is extremely slow, and it was very difficult to achieve complete reduction of the flavin semiquinone to the hydroquinone. The turnover of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
with native ETF and ETF containing the 4'-deoxy analogue was essentially identical when the reduced ETF was recycled by reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. However, the steady-state turnover of the dehydrogenase with 4'-deoxy-FAD was only 23% of the turnover with native ETF when ETF semiquinone formation was assayed directly under anaerobic conditions. This is consistent with the decreased potential of the oxidized semiquinone couple of the analog-containing ETF. ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD neither donates to nor accepts electrons from electron-transfer
flavoprotein
ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) at significant rates (</=0.5% the wild-type rates). These results indicate that the 4'-hydroxyl-N(1) hydrogen bond plays a major role in the stabilization of the anionic semiquinone and anionic hydroquinone oxidation states of ETF and that this hydrogen bond may provide a pathway for electron transfer between the ETF flavin and the flavin of ETF-QO.
...
PMID:The intraflavin hydrogen bond in human electron transfer flavoprotein modulates redox potentials and may participate in electron transfer. 1042 53
Arg249 in the large (alpha) subunit of human electron transfer
flavoprotein
(ETF) heterodimer is absolutely conserved throughout the ETF superfamily. The guanidinium group of alphaArg249 is within van der Waals contact distance and lies perpendicular to the xylene subnucleus of the flavin ring, near the region proposed to be involved in electron transfer with medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
. The backbone amide hydrogen of alphaArg249 is within hydrogen bonding distance of the carbonyl oxygen at the flavin C(2). alphaArg249 may modulate the potentials of the two flavin redox couples by hydrogen bonding the carbonyl oxygen at C(2) and by providing delocalized positive charge to neutralize the anionic semiquinone and anionic hydroquinone of the flavin. The potentials of the oxidized/semiquinone and semiquinone/hydroquinone couples decrease in an alphaR249K mutant ETF generated by site directed mutagenesis and expression in Escherichia coli, without major alterations of the flavin environment as judged by spectral criteria. The steady state turnover of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
and glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase decrease greater than 90% as a result of the alphaR249Ks mutation. In contrast, the steady state turnover of short chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase was decreased about 38% when alphaR249K ETF was the electron acceptor. Stopped flow absorbance measurements of the oxidation of reduced medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
/octenoyl-CoA product complex by wild type human ETF at 3 degrees C are biphasic (t(1/2)=12 ms and 122 ms). The rate of oxidation of this reduced binary complex of the dehydrogenase by the alphaR249K mutant ETF is extremely slow and could not be reasonably estimated. alphaAsp253 is proposed to function with alphaArg249 in the electron transfer pathway from medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
to ETF. The steady state kinetic constants of the dehydrogenase were not altered when ETF containing an alphaD253A mutant was the substrate. However, t(1/2) of the rapid phase of oxidation of the reduced medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
/octenoyl-CoA charge transfer complex almost doubled. betaTyr16 lies on a loop near the C(8) methyl group, and is also near the proposed site for interflavin electron transfer with medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
. The tyrosine residue makes van der Waals contact with the C(8) methyl group of the flavin in human ETF and Paracoccus denitrificans ETF (as betaTyr13) and lies at a 30 degrees C angle with the plane of the flavin. Human betaTyr16 was substituted with leucine and alanine residues to investigate the role of this residue in the modulation of the flavin redox potentials and in electron transfer to ETF. In betaY16L ETF, the potentials of the flavin were slightly reduced, and steady state kinetic constants were modestly altered. Substitution of an alanine residue for betaTyr16 yields an ETF with potentials very similar to the wild type but with steady state kinetic properties similar to betaY16L ETF. It is unlikely that the beta methyl group of the alanine residue interacts with the flavin C(8) methyl. Neither substitution of betaTyr16 had a large effect on the fast phase of ETF reduction by medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
.
...
PMID:The functions of the flavin contact residues, alphaArg249 and betaTyr16, in human electron transfer flavoprotein. 1044 67
Human 'electron transferring
flavoprotein
' (ETF) was inactivated by the thiol-specific reagent 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB). The kinetic profile showed the reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics during the initial phase of inactivation. Monitoring the release of 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate (TNB) showed that modification of 1 cysteine residue was responsible for the loss of activity. The inactivation of ETF by DTNB could be reversed upon incubation with thiol-containing reagents. The loss of activity was prevented by the inclusion of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(MCAD) and octanoyl-CoA. Cyanolysis of the DTNB modified-ETF with KCN led to the release of TNB accompanied presumably by the formation of the thio-cyano enzyme and with almost full recovery of activity. Conservation studies and the lack of 100% inactivation, however, suggested that this cysteine residue is not essential for the interaction with MCAD.
...
PMID:5,5'-Dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) as a probe for a non-essential cysteine residue at the medium chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase binding site of the human 'electron transferring flavoprotein' (ETF). 1048 48
We reported a male infant with multiple acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency, probably due to electron transfer flavoprotein dehydrogenase deficiency. He was noted to have severe muscle weakness, a high serum creatine kinase (CK) level up to 6920 IU/L, lipid storage myopathy and fatty liver at 6 months of age. A GC/MS analysis of urinary organic acids showed excess excretion of dicarboxylic acids, including glutaric, 2-hydroxyglutaric, adipic, suberic, sebacic, malonic, ethylmalonic and methylsuccinic acids. On a urinary acylglycine analysis, hexanoylglycine and suberylglycine were increased, but not isovalerylglycine, in amount. No ketosis was noted. The muscle pathology showed increased oil-red O positive lipid droplets of various sizes indicative of lipid storage myopathy. There was diffuse decrease in the activity of cytochrome c oxidase. No ragged-red fibers were noted. His clinical symptoms improved remarkably after the administration of riboflavin (100 mg/day) and L-carnitine (1000 mg/day). He was then diagnosed as having probable riboflavin-responsive multiple
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
deficiency. The glutaryl CoA dehydrogenase activity in lymphocytes was normal, as were the alpha- and beta-subunits of electron transfer
flavoprotein
. These findings led us to suspect electron transfer
flavoprotein
dehydrogenation deficiency. Although he had several episodes of short-term deterioration in clinical and laboratory findings, he developed normally with normal intelligent till 10 years of age.
...
PMID:[A case of riboflavin-responsive multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (glutaric aciduria type II)]. 1072 93
Medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(MCAD) is a tetrameric
flavoprotein
essential for the beta-oxidation of medium chain fatty acids. MCAD deficiency (MCADD) is an inherited error of fatty acid metabolism. The gene for MCAD is located on chromosome one (1p31). One variant of the MCAD gene, G985A, a point mutation causing a change from lysine to glutamate at position 304 (K304E) in the mature MCAD protein, has been found in 90% of the alleles in MCADD patients identified retrospectively. There is a high frequency of MCADD among people of Northern European descent, which is believed to be due to a founder effect. MCADD is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Of patients clinically diagnosed with MCADD, 81% who have been identified retrospectively are homozygous for K304E, and 18% are compound heterozygotes for K304E. Clinical data on the probability of clinical disease indicates that MCADD patients are at risk for the following outcomes: hypoglycemia, vomiting, lethargy, encephalopathy, respiratory arrest, hepatomegaly, seizures, apnea, cardiac arrest, coma, and sudden and unexpected death. Long-term outcomes include developmental and behavioral disability, chronic muscle weakness, failure to thrive, cerebral palsy, and attention deficit disorder (ADD). Differences in clinical disease specific to allelic variants have not been documented. Factors that may increase risk for disease onset or modify disease severity are age when the first episode occurred, fasting, and presence of infection. Acute attacks must be treated immediately with appropriate intravenous doses of glucose. For those diagnosed, long-term management of the disease includes preventing stress caused by fasting and maintaining a high-carbohydrate, reduced-fat diet, and carnitine supplementation. Hospitalization costs attributable to morbidity and mortality from MCADD are unknown; MCADD is not a diagnosis in the International Classification of Disease, 10th Revision (ICD-10) codebook. Furthermore, the penetrance of the MCAD genotypes is unknown; there appears to be a substantial number of asymptomatic MCADD individuals and some uncertainty regarding which individuals will manifest symptoms and which individuals will remain asymptomatic. Several technologies are available to detect MCADD. Diagnostic technologies include DNA-based tests for K304E mutations using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and the detection of abnormal metabolites in urine. Screening technologies include tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), which detects abnormal metabolites mostly in blood. State programs are beginning to offer screening in newborns for MCADD using MS/MS. In addition, a private company currently offers voluntary supplemental newborn screening for MCADD to birthing centers.
...
PMID:Medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency human genome epidemiology review. 1126 45
Isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD) is a homotetrameric flavoenzyme, which catalyzes the conversion of isovaleryl-CoA to 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA and transfers electrons to the electron-transferring
flavoprotein
, and is a member of the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
ACD
) enzyme family. Human IVD crystal structure with a bound substrate analogue shows the guanidino group of Arg387, a conserved residue among other members of the
ACD
enzyme family, juxtaposed to a phosphate oxygen of the 4'-phosphopantothiene moiety of the substrate analogue. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to investigate the role of Arg387 in substrate binding and enzyme function. Replacing this residue with Lys, Ala, Gln, or Glu resulted in stable proteins. Spectrophotometric substrate binding assays indicated that the Arg387Lys mutant was able to form the charge-transfer complex intermediate with similar efficiency to wild type, while the rest of the mutants were significantly less able to properly form this intermediate. However, the Km of the isovaleryl-CoA for the Arg387Lys mutant was 20.3 compared to 1.5 microM for the wild type. The Km for the rest of the mutants were 75.6, 195, and 550 microM, respectively. The catalytic efficiency per mole of FAD was 20.3, 3.3, 2.0, and 0.34 for the mutants, respectively, compared to 260 microM(-1) x min(-1) for the wild type. These results substantiate the important role of Arg387 in anchoring the substrate, and are consistent with the hypothesis that residues distant from the active site are important for stabilizing the enzyme:substrate/product complex, and could play an important role in the mechanism of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction.
...
PMID:Arginine 387 of human isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase plays a crucial role in substrate/product binding. 1159 19
The
flavoprotein
nitroalkane oxidase (NAO) from Fusarium oxysporum catalyzes the oxidation of nitroalkanes to the respective aldehydes with production of nitrite and hydrogen peroxide. The sequences of several peptides from the fungal enzyme were used to design oligonucleotides for the isolation of a portion of the NAO gene from an F. oxysporum genomic DNA preparation. This sequence was used to clone the cDNA for NAO from an F. oxysporum cDNA library. The sequence of the cloned cDNA showed that NOA is a member of the
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
ACAD
) superfamily. The members of this family share with NAO a mechanism that is initiated by proton removal from carbon, suggesting a common chemical reaction for this superfamily. NAO was expressed in Escherichia coli and the recombinant enzyme was characterized. Recombinant NAO has identical kinetic parameters to enzyme isolated from F. oxysporum but is isolated with oxidized FAD rather than the nitrobutyl-FAD found in the fungal enzyme. NAO purified from E. coli or from F. oxysporum has no detectable
ACAD
activity on short- or medium-chain acyl CoAs, and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase are unable to catalyze oxidation of nitroalkanes.
...
PMID:Cloning of nitroalkane oxidase from Fusarium oxysporum identifies a new member of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase superfamily. 1186 31
Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum catalyses the irreversible NADH-dependent formation of propionyl-CoA from acryloyl-CoA. Purification yielded a heterohexadecameric yellow-greenish enzyme complex [(alpha2betagamma)4; molecular mass 600 +/- 50 kDa] composed of a propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase (alpha2, 2 x 40 kDa) and an electron-transferring
flavoprotein
(ETF; beta, 38 kDa; gamma, 29 kDa). A flavin content (90% FAD and 10% FMN) of 2.4 mol per alpha2betagamma subcomplex (149 kDa) was determined. A substrate alternative to acryloyl-CoA (Km = 2 +/- 1 microm; kcat = 4.5 s-1 at 100 microm NADH) is 3-buten-2-one (methyl vinyl ketone; Km = 1800 microm; kcat = 29 s-1 at 300 microm NADH). The enzyme complex exhibits
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
activity with propionyl-CoA (Km = 50 microm; kcat = 2.0 s-1) or butyryl-CoA (Km = 100 microm; kcat = 3.5 s-1) as electron donor and 200 microm ferricenium hexafluorophosphate as acceptor. The enzyme also catalysed the oxidation of NADH by iodonitrosotetrazolium chloride (diaphorase activity) or by air, which led to the formation of H2O2 (NADH oxidase activity). The N-terminus of the dimeric propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase subunit is similar to those of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenases from several clostridia and related anaerobes (up to 55% sequence identity). The N-termini of the beta and gamma subunits share 40% and 35% sequence identities with those of the A and B subunits of the ETF from Megasphaera elsdenii, respectively, and up to 60% with those of putative ETFs from other anaerobes. Acryloyl-CoA reductase from C. propionicum has been characterized as a soluble enzyme, with kinetic properties perfectly adapted to the requirements of the organism. The enzyme appears not to be involved in anaerobic respiration with NADH or reduced ferredoxin as electron donors. There is no relationship to the trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductases from various organisms or the recently described acryloyl-CoA reductase activity of propionyl-CoA synthase from Chloroflexus aurantiacus.
...
PMID:Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum. An enzyme complex of propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase and electron-transferring flavoprotein. 1260 23
Acyl-CoA dehydrogenases constitute a family of flavoproteins that catalyze the alpha,beta-dehydrogenation of fatty acid acyl-CoA conjugates. While they differ widely in their specificity, they share the same basic chemical mechanism of alpha,beta-dehydrogenation. Medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
is probably the best-studied member of the class and serves as a model for the study of catalytic mechanisms. Based on medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
we discuss the main factors that bring about catalysis, promote specificity and determine the selective transfer of electrons to electron transferring
flavoprotein
. The mechanism of alpha,beta-dehydrogenation is viewed as a process in which the substrate alphaC-H and betaC-H bonds are ruptured concertedly, the first hydrogen being removed by the active center base Glu376-COO- as an H+, the second being transferred as a hydride to the flavin N(5) position. Hereby the pKa of the substrate alphaC-H is lowered from > 20 to approximately 8 by the effect of specific hydrogen bonds. Concomitantly, the pKa of Glu376-COO- is also raised to 8-9 due to the decrease in polarity brought about by substrate binding. The kinetic sequence of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
is rather complex and involves several intermediates. A prominent one is the molecular complex of reduced enzyme with the enoyl-CoA product that is characterized by an intense charge transfer absorption and serves as the point of transfer of electrons to the electron transferring
flavoprotein
. These views are also discussed in the context of the accompanying paper on the three-dimensional properties of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases.
...
PMID:Acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. A mechanistic overview. 1472 76
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>