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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 1, 134-140, 01, 1984
JM Soulie, GJ Sheplock, WX Tian and RY Hsu
A kinetic self-editing mechanism for correcting errors in the loading of
thioester substrates is described for the animal fatty acid synthetase
reaction. In the catalyzed reaction, these substrates load competitively on
a common phosphopantetheine site, and during each of the eight loading
steps the enzyme sites are partitioned between competent and incompetent
substrate molecules. The incompetently bound substrate is removed by CoA
through reversal of the loading reaction and partitioning again occurs. The
loading-unloading cycle is repeated until competent enzyme complex is
formed and the reaction proceeds. Furthermore, at each step the loading of
a malonyl residue is competitively favored as is the unloading of
enzyme-bound acetyl groups. This mechanism is entirely consistent with the
recently postulated role (Stern, A., Sedgwick, B., and Smith, S. J. Biol.
Chem. (1982) 257, 799-803) of CoA as a co-substrate. Supporting evidence is
obtained by monitoring the progress curves of NADPH oxidation by chicken
liver fatty acid synthetase in the stopped flow apparatus. At noninhibiting
acetyl-CoA, the reaction shows an initial lag period as the result of
preferential formation of malonyl-enzyme and time- dependent recycling of
the loading step to obtain competent acetyl- enzyme. At a
malonyl-CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio of 2:1, the induction time of the reaction is
1.02 +/- 0.05 s at 6 degrees C. It decreases with increasing acetyl-CoA
concentration or preincubation of the enzyme with acetyl-CoA which promotes
acetyl-enzyme formation but is slightly increased upon preincubation with
malonyl-CoA. Increasing acetyl-CoA causes a parallel decrease in steady
state cycle time (i.e. the average time required to complete a single
malonyl-CoA condensation cycle), suggesting that the latter is limited by
the lag period. At inhibitory acetyl-CoA, the steady state cycle time is
lengthened due to acetyl- enzyme formation at malonyl-CoA loading steps and
to the recycling necessary to obtain competent malonyl-enzyme. A
requirement of CoA for the first condensation cycle is unequivocally
demonstrated in conventional spectrophometric assays and stopped flow
experiments by using phosphotransacetylase and acetyl phosphate as a CoA
trap. This requirement at each loading step is normally met by CoA
generated through initial loading. At noninhibitory acetyl-CoA, added CoA
inhibits the reaction and slightly increases the lag.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT
400 WORDS)
Transient kinetic studies of fatty acid synthetase. A kinetic self- editing mechanism for the loading of acetyl and malonyl residues and the role of coenzyme A
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