Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.1.21 (CPT)
4,580 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fatty acid oxidation by bovine liver slices and mitochondria was examined to determine potential regulatory sites of fatty acid oxidation. Conversion of 1-[14C]palmitate to 14CO2 and total [14C]acid-soluble metabolites was used to measure fatty acid oxidation. Oxidation of palmitate (1 mM) was linear in both liver slice weight and incubation time. Carnitine stimulated palmitate oxidation; 2 mM dl-carnitine produced maximal stimulation of palmitate oxidation to both CO2 and acid-soluble metabolites. Propionate (10 mM) inhibited palmitate oxidation by bovine liver slices. Clofenapate, an inhibitor of fatty acid esterification, alone increased palmitate oxidation and was able to prevent the propionate-induced inhibition of palmitate oxidation by liver slices. Propionate (.5 to 10 mM) had no effect on palmitate oxidation by mitochondria, but malonyl Coenzyme A, the first committed intermediate of fatty acid synthesis, inhibited mitochondrial palmitate oxidation (inhibition constant = .3 microM). Liver mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.21) exhibited Michaelis constants for palmitoyl Coenzyme A and l-carnitine of 11.5 microM and .59 mM, respectively. Long-chain fatty acid oxidation in bovine liver is regulated by mechanisms similar to those in rats but adapted to the unique digestive physiology of the bovine.
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PMID:Control of bovine hepatic fatty acid oxidation. 378 85

Mitochondria were isolated from rat adult liver, foetal liver, kidney cortex, heart, skeletal muscle and interscapular brown adipose tissue. DL-2-Bromopalmitoyl-CoA inhibited the overt form of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT1) in heart, skeletal muscle and brown adipose tissue, with an IC50 value (concentration giving 50% inhibition) of 1.3-1.6 microM. By contrast, the IC50 value for inhibition of the kidney or adult liver enzyme was 0.08-0.1 microM. CPT1 in near-term foetal liver differed from that in adult liver in that the IC50 for inhibition by 2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA was 0.57 microM. It is suggested that there may be tissue-specific forms of the catalytic entity of CPT1 and that foetal liver may contain a mixture of adult liver- and muscle-type enzymes. In rats made hypothyroid by administration of propylthiouracil and an iodine-deficient diet, hepatic CPT1 activity was decreased by 83%. However, CPT1 activity in extrahepatic tissues showed no adaptive decrease in hypothyroidism.
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PMID:Carnitine palmitoyltransferase in liver and five extrahepatic tissues in the rat. Inhibition by DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA and effect of hypothyroidism. 379 66

The effects of 2-tetradecylglycidic acid (TDGA), TDGA-CoA and TDGA-carnitine were examined in purified hepatic CPT (carnitine palmitoyltransferase) and in hepatic mitochondria and inverted submitochondrial vesicles derived from Sprague-Dawley rats. Since TDGA has been reported as a specific inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-A (CPT-A), the focus was on kinetics and inhibition of CPT-A, and the relationship of this key enzyme to beta-oxidation. After administration of TDGA in vivo to overnight-starved rats, the Vmax. of CPT in intact mitochondria and in inverted vesicles (CPT-B) was depressed by 66%. The S0.5 for palmitoyl-CoA and Km for carnitine were unchanged. The I50 (concn. giving 50% inhibition) for malonyl-CoA was significantly increased from 20 to 141 microM in intact mitochondria, but unchanged (199 versus 268 microM) in inverted vesicles. The addition in vitro of TDGA-CoA (0-1.0 microM) gave I50 values of 0.29 and 0.27 microM (S.E.M. = 0.19) in intact mitochondria from fed and 48 h-starved rats, and 0.81 and 1.57 microM (S.E.M. = 0.29) for inverted vesicles derived from fed and starved rats. Addition in vitro of TDGA-carnitine to mitochondria from starved rats yielded an I50 value of 27.7 mM (S.E.M. = 12.2) for L-[methyl-14C]carnitine release from palmitoyl-L-[methyl-14C]carnitine and 0.64 mM (S.E.M. = 0.07) for palmitoyl-L-[methyl-14C]carnitine formation from L-[methyl-14C]carnitine in intact mitochondria. Inverted vesicles were not measurably sensitive to TDGA-carnitine up to 500 microM for the assay of L-[methyl-14C]carnitine release, but were as sensitive as intact mitochondria when inhibition was determined in the direction of palmitoyl-L-[methyl-14C]carnitine formation (I50 = 0.54 +/- 0.07 microM). When TDGA-CoA was added to intact mitochondria, then incubated for 5 min at room temperature and subsequently washed out, Vmax. of CPT decreased from 5.8 to 3.5 (S.E.M. = 0.6) in intact mitochondria, and from 17.2 to 6.3 (S.E.M. = 4.8) in inverted vesicles. The Km for L-carnitine and the S0.5 for palmitoyl-CoA increased 2-fold with TDGA-CoA pretreatment in both intact mitochondria and inverted vesicles. Detergent solubilization (0.05% Triton X-100) resulted in a complete loss of TDGA-CoA sensitivity (up to 1.0 microM measured). Sonicated mitochondria exhibited an I50 of 0.72 +/- 0.03 microM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Action in vivo and in vitro of 2-tetradecylglycidic acid, 2-tetradecylglycidyl-CoA and 2-tetradecylglycidylcarnitine on hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase. 380 Sep 62

Methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (MGBG) is an antileukemic agent and a structural polyamine analogue which inhibits S-adenosyl methionine decarboxylase. However, MGBG also produces profound mitochondrial structural damage and inhibition of fatty acid oxidation. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase-A (CPT-A) is located on the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane and is the putative rate-controlling enzyme for mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation. The present experiments were designed to determine if MGBG inhibits CPT-A. Liver, heart and skeletal muscle mitochondria were isolated from rats following 24 hr of starvation. Measuring the reaction in the direction of palmitoylcarnitine plus CoA formation from palmitoyl-CoA plus carnitine ("forward reaction"), MGBG was competitive with l-carnitine. The MGBG CPT-A Ki values were (mM): liver, 5.0 +/- 0.6 (N = 15); heart 3.2 +/- 1.2 (N = 3); and skeletal muscle, 2.8 +/- 1.0 (N = 3). Lysis of hepatic mitochondria with Triton X-100 yielded a Ki of 4.0 +/- 2.0, which was not significantly different from intact mitochondria or inverted vesicles (4.9 mM). Purified hepatic CPT had a Ki of 4.2 mM. MGBG did not inhibit purified CPT in the "reverse reaction" (palmitoyl-CoA plus carnitine formation from palmitoylcarnitine plus CoA). Spermine and spermidine, which are structurally similar to MGBG, did not inhibit either CPT activity or acid-soluble product formation from 1-[14C]palmitoyl-CoA. MGBG inhibited mitochondrial state 3 oxidation rates of palmitoyl-CoA and palmitoylcarnitine, as well as of glutamate. However, the fatty acid substrates were considerably more sensitive than glutamate to MGBG inhibition. MGBG also increased hepatic mitochondrial aggregation which was reversed by l-carnitine. Fluorescence polarization, using 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) as a probe, indicated that MGBG increased membrane rigidity in a dose-dependent manner. This effect was not altered by l-carnitine. MGBG also inhibited purified pigeon breast carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT; Ki = 1.6 mM). While MGBG appeared to be competitive with l-carnitine for both CPT and CAT, MGBG also exhibits a number of effects which may be mediated through membrane interaction and which are not reversed by carnitine.
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PMID:Effect of methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) on hepatic, heart and skeletal muscle mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase and beta-oxidation of fatty acids. 382 37

Rat liver mitochondria were preextracted with Triton X-100 in the absence of salts to remove malonyl-CoA-insensitive carnitine palmitoyltransferase. From the remaining membrane residues a malonyl-CoA-sensitive enzyme was solubilized with octyl glucopyranoside in the presence of KCl. Significant enzyme activity, [2-14C]malonyl-CoA binding and malonyl-CoA inhibition of this enzyme was present only after removal of detergent by precipitation with poly(ethylene glycol). The enzyme activity was rapidly lost in the solubilized form. High concentrations of glycerol protected the enzyme. The alkylating irreversible inhibitor, S-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)-CoA, strongly inhibited the malonyl-CoA-sensitive enzyme in the membrane residues. The enzyme was protected against this inhibitor by malonyl-CoA and palmitoyl-CoA. The more loosely membrane-bound malonyl-CoA-insensitive enzyme failed to bind malonyl-CoA, was stable in the presence of detergents and was not inhibited by S-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)-CoA. It is suggested that two different carnitine palmitoyltransferase proteins exist in the inner mitochondrial membrane and that the detergent-labile malonyl-CoA-sensitive enzyme is the less easily extracted of the two.
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PMID:Carnitine palmitoyltransferase: characterization of a labile detergent-extracted malonyl-CoA-sensitive enzyme from rat liver mitochondria. 382 68

Malonyl-CoA and 2-tetradecylglycidyl-CoA (TG-CoA) are potent inhibitors of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (EC 2.3.1.21). To gain insight into their mode of action, the effects of both agents on mitochondria from rat liver and skeletal muscle were examined before and after membrane disruption with octylglucoside or digitonin. Pretreatment of intact mitochondria with TG-CoA caused almost total suppression of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, with concomitant loss in malonyl-CoA binding capacity. However, subsequent membrane solubilization with octylglucoside resulted in high and equal carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity from control and TG-CoA pretreated mitochondria; neither solubilized preparation showed sensitivity to malonyl-CoA or TG-CoA. Upon removal of the detergent by dialysis the bulk of carnitine palmitoyltransferase was reincorporated into membrane vesicles, but the reinserted enzyme remained insensitive to both inhibitors. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase containing vesicles failed to bind malonyl-CoA. With increasing concentrations of digitonin, release of carnitine palmitoyltransferase paralleled disruption of the inner mitochondrial membrane, as reflected by the appearance of matrix enzymes in the soluble fraction. The profile of enzyme release was identical in control and TG-CoA pretreated mitochondria even though carnitine palmitoyltransferase I had been initially suppressed in the latter. Similar results were obtained when animals were treated with 2-tetradecylglycidate prior to the preparation of liver mitochondria. We conclude that malonyl-CoA and TG-CoA interact reversibly and irreversibly, respectively, with a common site on the mitochondrial (inner) membrane and that occupancy of this site causes inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, but not of carnitine palmitoyltransferase II. Assuming that octylglucoside and digitonin do not selectively inactivate carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, the data suggest that both malonyl-CoA and TG-CoA interact with a regulatory locus that is closely juxtaposed to but distinct from the active site of the membrane-bound enzyme.
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PMID:Interaction of malonyl-CoA and 2-tetradecylglycidyl-CoA with mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase I. 384 Jan 67

DL-Aminocarnitine (3-amino-4-trimethylaminobutyric acid) and acetyl-DL-aminocarnitine (3-acetamido-4-trimethylaminobutyric acid) have been synthesized and the interactions of these compounds with carnitine acetyltransferase and carnitine palmitoyltransferase investigated. As anticipated from the low group transfer potential of amides, carnitine acetyltransferase catalyzes the transfer of acetyl groups from CoASAc to aminocarnitine (Km = 3.8 mM) but does not catalyze detectable transfer from acetylaminocarnitine to CoASH. Acetyl-DL-aminocarnitine is, however, a potent competitive inhibitor of carnitine acetyltransferase (Ki = 24 microM) and is bound to carnitine acetyltransferase about 13-fold more tightly than is acetylcarnitine, with which it is isosteric. DL-Aminocarnitine and, to a lesser extent, acetyl-DL-aminocarnitine are also inhibitors of the carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity of detergent-lysed rat liver mitochondria; in the presence of 1 mM L-carnitine, 5 microM aminocarnitine inhibits palmitoyl transfer by 64%. Significant acylation of aminocarnitine by palmitoyl-CoA was not observed. Neither aminocarnitine nor acetylaminocarnitine is significantly catabolized by mice; aminocarnitine is converted to acetylaminocarnitine in vivo. Both compounds are excreted in the urine. Mice given acetylaminocarnitine catabolize [14C]acetyl-L-carnitine and [14C]palmitate to 14CO2 more slowly than do control animals. Mice given acetylaminocarnitine and then starved are found to reversibly accumulate triglycerides in their livers; mice given the inhibitor but not starved do not show this effect.
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PMID:DL-aminocarnitine and acetyl-DL-aminocarnitine. Potent inhibitors of carnitine acyltransferases and hepatic triglyceride catabolism. 384 Apr 86

Unequivocal demarcation between immature, nonmigratory yellow eels and migratory silver eels of greater sexual maturity is possible by measuring eye diameter and retinal capillary length, which undergo a 1.5- and 2.3-fold increase during metamorphosis, respectively. Anatomical arrangement of trunk musculature is similar in the two groups except for an increased depth of slow muscle in silver eel. Histochemical analysis reveals a progressive increase in numbers of "displaced" fast fibres within slow muscle of the lateral line triangle in maturing eels, although these are unlikely to affect recruitment pattern of muscle fibre types. Previous studies have suggested greater involvement of fast muscle in locomotion of migratory eels. In contrast, estimates of enzyme activity in fast muscle suggest an inadequate aerobic capacity to fuel sustained activity. Myoglobin content is extremely low, around 0.4 nM g wet wt-1. Prolonged anaerobic metabolism is also discounted as a migratory strategy. Increased energy provision for migration is apparently derived from increased capacity for both aerobic carbohydrate metabolism and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation within slow muscle of silver eels. Activity of hexokinase (HK) shows a 1.6-fold increase (to 0.51 microM g wet wt-1) and carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) a 3.1-fold increase (to 0.22 microM g wet wt-1 min-1), suggesting a maximal flux through these pathways of 18 and 14 ATP equivalents, respectively. However, the fatty acyl transferase system of skeletal muscle mitochondria displays up to threefold greater activity with palmitoleoyl CoA (C16:1) as substrate than with the usual palmitoyl CoA (C16:0). Slow muscle of silver eel is therefore capable of deriving aerobic energy from free fatty acids and carbohydrate in the ratio 2.3:1. Differences in aerobic enzyme activities are not paralleled by myoglobin content of slow muscle, being 15 and 16 nM g wet wt-1 for yellow and silver eel, respectively. Structural reorganization of muscle fibres during metamorphosis, however, results in a twofold elevation of cytoplasmic myoglobin concentration in silver eel. It would appear that dramatic differences in metabolic capacity between life history stages of eel is required to overcome locomotory inefficiency of yellow eels and to "preadapt" silver eels for migratory activity. This increased locomotory capacity may be amplified by a subsequent training response.
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PMID:Metamorphosis of the American eel, Anguilla rostrata LeSeur: I. Changes in metabolism of skeletal muscle. 395 May 63

The active site of the overt activity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I) in rat liver mitochondria was blocked by the self-catalysed formation of the S-carboxypalmitoyl-CoA ester of (-)-carnitine, followed by washing of the mitochondria. CPT I activity in treated mitochondria was inhibited by 90-95%. Binding of [14C]malonyl-CoA to these mitochondria was not inhibited as compared with that of control mitochondria. When CPT I activity was inhibited, palmitoyl-CoA could markedly displace [14C]malonyl-CoA binding from the low-affinity site for the inhibitor [Zammit, Corstorphine & Gray (1984) Biochem. J. 222, 335-342], but not from the high-affinity site for malonyl-CoA binding. The saturation characteristics of the malonyl-CoA-binding component lost in the presence of palmitoyl-CoA were sigmoidal, and thus suggestive of co-operative binding at this site. It is suggested that the site hitherto considered to be a low-affinity malonyl-CoA-binding site may be effectively a second, allosteric, acyl-CoA-binding site on CPT I under conditions that prevail in vivo, whereas the high-affinity site for malonyl-CoA may be exclusive to the inhibitor. The possibility that the competitive-type interactions of malonyl-CoA and acyl-CoA on CPT I activity could arise from the effects of separate malonyl-CoA and acyl-CoA allosteric sites is considered. The possible significance of the large difference in the capacity of the two sites and their different saturation kinetics is also discussed.
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PMID:Binding of [14C]malonyl-CoA to rat liver mitochondria after blocking of the active site of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I. Displacement of low-affinity binding by palmitoyl-CoA. 395 55

Oxfenicine [S-2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)glycine] is transaminated in heart and liver to 4-hydroxyphenylglyoxylate, an inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation shown in this study to act at the level of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (EC 2.3.1.21). Oxfenicine was an effective inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation in heart, but not in liver. Tissue specificity of oxfenicine inhibition of fatty acid oxidation was due to greater oxfenicine transaminase activity in heart and to greater sensitivity of heart carnitine palmitoyltransferase I to inhibition by 4-hydroxyphenylglyoxylate [I50 (concentration giving 50% inhibition) of 11 and 510 microM for the enzymes of heart and liver mitochondria, respectively]. Branched-chain-amino-acid aminotransferase (isoenzyme I, EC 2.6.1.42) was responsible for the transamination of oxfenicine in heart. A positive correlation was found between the capacity of various tissues to transaminate oxfenicine and the known content of branched-chain-amino-acid aminotransferase in these tissues. Out of three observed liver oxfenicine aminotransferase activities, one may correspond to asparagine aminotransferase, but the major activity could not be identified by partial purification and characterization. As reported previously for malonyl-CoA inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, 4-hydroxyphenylglyoxylate inhibition of this enzyme was found to be very pH-dependent. In striking contrast with the kinetics of malonyl-CoA inhibition, 4-hydroxyphenylglyoxylate inhibition was not affected by oleoyl-CoA concentration, but was partially reversed by increasing carnitine concentrations.
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PMID:Two mechanisms produce tissue-specific inhibition of fatty acid oxidation by oxfenicine. 400 84


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