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Query: EC:6.4.1.2 (
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
)
2,876
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, fatty acid synthetase and
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
(extracted with or without phosphatase inhibitor) in rat liver did not vary significantly during 24 h. The hepatic levels of glucose 6-
phosphate
and malate increased coordinately 3-6 h after the beginning (1900 h) of food intake and were high until morning, whereas the levels of acetyl-CoA and citrate peaked at 1900 h and then decreased. However, it is remarkable that the in vivo incorporation of 3H from tritiated water into fatty acids in liver increased with the level of malonyl-CoA after food intake. Comparing the substrate and effector levels with the Km and Ka values for the enzymes, the levels of acetyl-CoA, malonyl-CoA and citrate appear to limit the enzyme activities. It is suggested that, after food intake, the physiological activity of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
was increased with the substrate increase and/or with the catalytic activation with citrate, and consequently, the fatty acid synthetase activity was also increased, whereas the enzyme activities measured under optimum conditions were not.
...
PMID:Diurnal variations of lipogenic enzymes, their substrate and effector levels, and lipogenesis from tritiated water in rat liver. 286 Sep 23
Rats were injected daily for 8 weeks with 50 mg of thioacetamide per kg to produce liver tumours. Some of these rats were given three doses of 50 mg of an antitumoural Rh(III) complex/kg at 14, 9 and 5 days before the end of the thioacetamide treatment. Thioacetamide decreased the rate of weight gain of the rats and the Rh(III) complex partly restored it. The activities of ATP citrate lyase,
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
and fatty acid synthetase in the livers were decreased by thioacetamide treatment and the Rh(III) complex partly reversed this effect. By contrast the activity of malic enzyme was increased by both thioacetamide and the Rh(III) complex and this effect probably relates to NADPH production for detoxification rather than for lipogenesis. Treatment with thioacetamide increased the rate of synthesis of di- and triacylglycerols from glycerol
phosphate
by liver homogenates, the activity of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase and the incorporation of [3H]glycerol into liver triacylglycerol in vivo. The Rh(III) complex did not produce a significant reversal of these effects of thioacetamide on glycerolipid synthesis. The total uptake of intraportally injected [3H]glycerol by the livers of thioacetamide treated rats was decreased and this was associated with a lowered activity of glycerol kinase. Thioacetamide increased the activity of hepatic ornithine decarboxylase by about 40-fold, but the Rh(III) complex did not reverse this effect. However, the decrease in tyrosine aminotransferase activity that was produced by thioacetamide was partly reversed by the Rh(III) complex. These results are discussed in relation to the tumour-promoting effects of thioacetamide and the antitumoural action of the Rh(III) complex.
...
PMID:Effects of an antitumoural rhodium complex on thioacetamide-induced liver tumor in rats. Changes in the activities of ornithine decarboxylase, tyrosine aminotransferase and of enzymes involved in fatty acid and glycerolipid synthesis. 287 12
When fasted rats were refed for 4 days with a carbohydrate and protein diet, a carbohydrate diet (without protein) or a protein diet (without carbohydrate), the effects of dietary nutrients on the fatty acid synthesis from injected tritiated water, the substrate and effector levels of lipogenic enzymes and the enzyme activities were compared in the livers. In the carbohydrate diet group, although
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
was much induced and citrate was much increased, the activity of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
extracted with phosphatase inhibitor and activated with 0.5 mM citrate was low in comparison to the carbohydrate and protein diet group. The physiological activity of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
seems to be low. In the protein diet group, the concentrations of glucose 6-
phosphate
, acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA were markedly higher than in the carbohydrate and protein group, whereas the concentrations of oxaloacetate and citrate were lower. The levels of hepatic cAMP and plasma glucagon were high. The activities of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
and also fatty acid synthetase were low in the protein group. By feeding fat, the citrate level was not decreased as much as the lipogenic enzyme inductions. Comparing the substrate and effector levels with the Km and Ka values, the activities of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
and fatty acid synthetase could be limited by the levels. The fatty acid synthesis from tritiated water corresponded more closely to the
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
activity (activated 0.5 mM citrate) than to other lipogenic enzyme activities. On the other hand, neither the activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme (even though markedly lowered by diet) nor the levels of their substrates appeared to limit fatty acid synthesis of any of the dietary groups. Thus, it is suggested that under the dietary nutrient manipulation,
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
activity would be the first candidate of the rate-limiting factor for fatty acid synthesis with the regulations of the enzyme quantity, the substrate and effector levels and the enzyme modification.
...
PMID:Effects of dietary nutrients on substrate and effector levels of lipogenic enzymes, and lipogenesis from tritiated water in rat liver. 287 38
Activation of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
during incubation of crude extracts of lactating rat mammary gland with Mg2+ and citrate can be blocked by NaF, suggesting that it represents a dephosphorylation of the enzyme. The greater extent of activation in extracts from 24 h-starved rats (200%) compared with fed controls (70%) implies that the decrease in
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
activity in response to 24 h starvation may involve increased phosphorylation of the enzyme.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase
was purified from the mammary glands of lactating rats in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors by avidin-Sepharose chromatography. Starvation of the rats for 24 h increased the concentration of citrate giving half-maximal activation by 75%, and decreased the Vmax. of the purified enzyme by 73%. This was associated with an increase in the alkali-labile
phosphate
content from 3.3 +/- 0.2 to 4.5 +/- 0.4 mol/mol of enzyme subunit. Starvation of lactating rats for 6 h, or short-term insulin deficiency induced by streptozotocin injection, did not effect the kinetic parameters or the
phosphate
content of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
purified from mammary glands. The effects of 24 h starvation on the kinetic parameters and
phosphate
content of the purified enzyme were completely reversed by re-feeding for only 2.5 h. This effect was blocked if the animals were injected with streptozotocin before re-feeding, suggesting that the increase in plasma insulin that occurs on re-feeding was responsible for the activation of the enzyme. The effects of re-feeding 24 h-starved rats on the kinetic parameters and
phosphate
content of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
could be mimicked by treating enzyme purified from 24 h-starved rats with protein phosphatase-2A in vitro. Our results suggest that, in mammary glands of 24 h-starved lactating rats, insulin brings about a dephosphorylation of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
in vivo, which may be at least partly responsible for the reactivation of mammary lipogenesis in response to re-feeding.
...
PMID:The role of acetyl-CoA carboxylase phosphorylation in the control of mammary gland fatty acid synthesis during the starvation and re-feeding of lactating rats. 287 30
Because of certain similarities between
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
(
ACC
) and tubulin, and the recent demonstration of the ADP-ribosylation of tubulin by cholera toxin, we have investigated a potential role for ADP-ribosylation in the regulation of
ACC
activity. Incubation of purified rat liver
ACC
with cholera toxin in the presence of millimolar concentrations of [adenylate-32P]NAD results in a time-dependent incorporation of ADP-ribose into
ACC
of greater than 2 mol/mol of enzyme subunit, accompanied by a marked inactivation of enzyme activity. This effect is not mimicked by pertussis toxin, ADP-ribose, or ribose 5-
phosphate
. Incubation of labeled
ACC
with snake venom phosphodiesterase and alkaline hydrolysis release 32P-products tentatively identified by high-performance liquid chromatography as 5'-[32P]AMP and [32P]ADP-ribose, respectively. These data are consistent with a mono-ADP-ribosylation of
ACC
catalyzed by cholera toxin. Phosphodiesterase treatment of inactivated
ACC
partially restores enzyme activity. The effects of ADP-ribosylation of
ACC
are expressed both as a decrease in the enzyme Vmax and as an increase in the apparent Ka for citrate. These results suggest that
ACC
might be a substrate for endogenous ADP-ribosyltransferases and that this covalent modification could be an important regulatory mechanism for the modulation of fatty acid synthesis in vivo.
...
PMID:Regulation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase by ADP-ribosylation. 287 58
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase
and its associated kinase have been purified to homogeneity from rat liver and, together with the catalytic subunit of liver protein phosphatase, used to study the effect of phosphorylation on the carboxylase activity. Phosphatase increases the carboxylase activity, whereas the kinase decreases it. A linear inverse relationship (correlation coefficient = 0.98) exists between
phosphate
incorporated by the kinase and the specific activity. The kinetics of activation by citrate show an increased Ka and a decreased Vmax for carboxylase preparations with increasing levels of
phosphate
. On this basis an enzymic test was devised for
phosphate
incorporated by the kinase. Thus the ratio of activities at 0 and 2 mM citrate is inversely proportional to the
phosphate
incorporated (correlation coefficient = -0.95), with 0.8 mol of P incorporated per mol of subunit decreasing the activity ratio from 0.5 to 0. This activity ratio method has an inherent internal control which makes it suitable for determining the level of protein-bound
phosphate
affecting the carboxylase activity in crude tissue extracts, and hence it should be useful for physiological studies. Tryptic maps of carboxylase labeled with radioactive
phosphate
by the carboxylase kinase indicate that the slightly less than 1 mol of P/mol of subunit is distributed equally between two peptides, whereas cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylates these two sites and a third which may not affect activity.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation state of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase. I. Linear inverse relationship to activity ratios at different citrate concentrations. 287 33
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase
from liver exhibits a linear inverse relationship between the ratio of enzymic activities at 0 and 2 mM citrate and the extent of phosphorylation by its kinase, and this citrate activity ratio method was used to examine the effect of nutritional conditions on the phosphorylation state of the enzyme. This method showed that the calculated phosphorylation state, being the extent of phosphorylation at sites accessible to carboxylase kinase, was highest in the livers of starved rats, lower in those fed normally, and lower still in starved rats which had been refed for 48 h on a fat-free diet. The actual values were 0.44, 0.26, and 0 mol of P/subunit, respectively, provided that liver samples were frozen rapidly to liquid nitrogen temperatures and extracted with stopping buffers at temperatures well below freezing. Normal homogenization with stopping buffers (containing inhibitors for protein kinases and phosphatases) resulted in much higher calculated phosphorylation states. The effect of nutritional conditions on the phosphorylation state as estimated reported above was confirmed by purifying the carboxylase from livers of rats, measuring the amount of
phosphate
which could be incorporated by carboxylase kinase, and comparing this with the phosphorylation state calculated from the citrate activity ratio method or the specific activity. Furthermore, treatment with protein phosphatase of carboxylase from starved rats resulted in the largest increase in specific activity, that from the starved/refed rats in the least. Finally, the effects of hyperglycemia on carboxylase and phosphorylase characteristics in the livers of intact rats were ascertained by taking liver samples and preparing crude extracts by the rapid freezing method described above. Hyperglycemia caused a rapid increase in the activity of the carboxylase and a rapid decrease in its putative phosphorylation state as measured by the citrate activity ratio method. Phosphorylase was also dephosphorylated, as indicated by a decrease in phosphorylase a activity. We conclude that the citrate activity ratio method is a valid test for the phosphorylation state of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
in crude extracts of tissue.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation state of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase. II. Variation with nutritional condition. 287 34
The activation of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
(measured in a crude supernatant fraction) caused by insulin treatment of adipocytes was completely unaffected by the addition of a large amount of highly purified protein phosphatase to the supernatant fraction. Under the same conditions the inhibition of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
by adrenaline was totally reversed. Experiments with 32P-labelled adipocytes showed that insulin increased the total phosphorylation of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
from 2.7 to 3.5 molecules of
phosphate
/240 kDa subunit, and confirmed that this increase was partially accounted for by phosphorylation within a specific peptide (the 'I-site' peptide). Protein phosphatase treatment of the crude supernatant fractions removed over 80% of the 32P radioactivity from the enzyme and removed all detectable radioactivity from the I-site peptide. The effect of insulin on
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
activity, but not the effect on phosphorylation, was lost on purification of the enzyme on avidin-Sepharose. The effect on enzyme activity was also lost if crude supernatant fractions were subjected to rapid gel filtration after treatment under conditions of high ionic strength, similar to those used in the avidin-Sepharose procedure. These results show that, although insulin does increase the phosphorylation of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
at a specific site, this does not cause enzyme activation. They suggest instead that activation of the enzyme by insulin is mediated by a tightly bound low-Mr effector which dissociates from the enzyme at high ionic strength.
...
PMID:Evidence that activation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase by insulin in adipocytes is mediated by a low-Mr effector and not by increased phosphorylation. 288 38
Phosphorylation of soluble proteins in rat mammary acinar cells was investigated. When phosphorylation proceeded in intact cells, in the presence of [32P]Pi, the major non-casein phosphoproteins, including
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
, were unresponsive to incubation conditions that caused major increases in the intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP. The overall 32P specific radioactivity (c.p.m./microgram of protein) of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
, assessed after affinity purification of the enzyme with avidin-Sepharose, was unchanged by incubation under such conditions. Furthermore, the distribution of 32P among tryptic phosphopeptides of the enzyme, resolved by reversed-phase h.p.l.c., was not altered by cyclic AMP-increasing treatments of the acinar cells. When cytosol fractions were incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP, some phosphoproteins responded to the addition of micromolar concentrations of dibutyryl cyclic AMP or cyclic AMP by undergoing an enhancement of
phosphate
incorporation. In these experiments in vitro, protein phosphatase activity did not make a major contribution to the net phosphorylation of individual phosphoproteins, and
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
was not prominent among the phosphoproteins identified after short (less than 1 min) incubations of cytosols with [gamma-32P]ATP. The resistance of protein phosphorylation to variations in the cyclic AMP concentration in intact mammary epithelial cells, demonstrated by this work, is one of several mechanisms that ensure the pleiotropic refractoriness of those cells to agents which normally cause a stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in hormone-sensitive cells.
...
PMID:Protein phosphorylation in rat mammary acini and in cytosol preparations in vitro. Phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase is unaffected by cyclic AMP. 288 90
9-Oxononanoic acid, which is one of the major products of the autoxidation of linoleic acid, was administered orally to rats and its effect on hepatic lipid metabolism was investigated. The de novo synthesis of fatty acids was strongly reduced 30 h after the administration of 100 mg of 9-oxononanoic acid as compared to that in the saline-administered group. Activity of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
decreased by 60% and the activity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase increased by 35% in the test group. The level of triacylglycerols in serum was low and the level of free fatty acids remained unchanged. Thus, the administration of 9-oxononanoic acid decreased hepatic lipogenesis. It is generally believed that the reduction in lipogenesis is facilitated by a decrease in the NADPH level. The ratio of NADPH/NADP in the test group, however, became high as compared to that in the control group, and the activities of glucose 6-
phosphate
and isocitrate dehydrogenases increased. On the other hand, the levels of CoA derivatives, especially long-chain acyl-CoA, were higher in the test group than in the control. Therefore, the reduction of hepatic lipogenesis in the 9-oxononanoic acid group could be attributed to the inhibition of
acetyl-CoA carboxylase
by the accumulated long-chain acyl-CoA.
...
PMID:Effect of orally administered 9-oxononanoic acid on lipogenesis in rat liver. 289 34
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