Effects of DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA and bromoacetyl-CoA in rat liver and heart mitochondria. Inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase and displacement of [14C]malonyl-CoA from mitochondrial binding sites. (57/96)

The overt form of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT1) in rat liver and heart mitochondria was inhibited by DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA and bromoacetyl-CoA. S-Methanesulphonyl-CoA inhibited liver CPT1. The inhibitory potency of DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA was 17 times greater with liver than with heart CPT1. Inhibition of CPT1 by DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA was unaffected by 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or (in liver) by starvation. In experiments in which DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA displaced [14C]malonyl-CoA bound to liver mitochondria, the KD (competing) was 25 times the IC50 for inhibition of CPT1 providing evidence that the malonyl-CoA-binding site is unlikely to be the same as the acyl-CoA substrate site. Bromoacetyl-CoA inhibition of CPT1 was more potent in heart than in liver mitochondria and was diminished by 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or (in liver) by starvation. Bromoacetyl-CoA displaced bound [14C]malonyl-CoA from heart and liver mitochondria. In heart mitochondria this displacement was competitive with malonyl-CoA and was considerably facilitated by L-carnitine. In liver mitochondria this synergism between carnitine and bromoacetyl-CoA was not observed. It is suggested that bromoacetyl-CoA interacts with the malonyl-CoA-binding site of CPT1. L-Carnitine also facilitated the displacement by DL-2-bromopalmitoyl-CoA of [14C]malonyl-CoA from heart, but not from liver, mitochondria. DL-2-Bromopalmitoyl-CoA and bromoacetyl-CoA also inhibited overt carnitine octanoyl-transferase in liver and heart mitochondria. These findings are discussed in relation to inter-tissue differences in (a) the response of CPT1 activity to various inhibitors and (b) the relationship between high-affinity malonyl-CoA-binding sites and those sites for binding of L-carnitine and acyl-CoA substrates.  (+info)

The presence of peroxisomal carnitine palmitoyltransferase in chick embryo liver. (58/96)

Hepatic peroxisomes and mitochondria from 20-day-old chick embryo were separated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and the characteristics of carnitine acyltransferases in these organelles were studied. The carnitine acyltransferase activities in peroxisomes were increased markedly by the treatment of chick embryo with clofibrate, while those in mitochondria did not change. In the liver of clofibrate-treated chick embryo, approximately 50% of total liver carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) activity was present in the peroxisomal fraction. Peroxisomal CPT activity was easily solubilized, in contrast with mitochondrial CPT. The solubilized protein solutions from isolated peroxisomes and mitochondria were separately chromatographed on a column of Blue Sepharose CL-6B after the gel filtration on Sephadex G-25. Peroxisomal CPT was completely bound to a Blue Sepharose CL-6B column and was eluted below 0.25 M KCl, whereas mitochondrial CPT was not retained on the column. The substrate specificity profile of peroxisomal CPT with long-chain acyl-CoAs (C8 to C18) was similar to that of mitochondrial CPT, and the apparent Km value of peroxisomal CPT for palmitoyl-CoA was 5.2 microM, being similar to that of mitochondrial CPT. It is concluded that carnitine long-chain acyltransferase, which is different from mitochondrial CPT and is induced by clofibrate treatment, is present in peroxisomes of chick embryo liver.  (+info)

Carnitine metabolism in human subjects. III. Metabolism in disease. (59/96)

Carnitine metabolism is reviewed in lipid storage myopathies, diabetes, vomiting sickness of Jamaica, malnutrition, hyperthyrodism, Duchenne dystrophy, and a few other disease states.  (+info)

The effect of long-term fasting on the branched chain acylcarnitines and branched chain carnitine acyltransferases. (60/96)

The effect of fasting for 8 days on the levels of carnitine acyltransferases in heart, liver, liver mitochondria, skeletal muscle, skeletal muscle mitochondria, kidney, and testes in young adult male rats was determined. The specific activities of acetyl-, octanyl-, isobutyryl-, and isovaleryl-carnitine acyltransferase in mitochondria isolated from the livers of fasted animals were significantly higher than the levels of the transferases isolated from livers of fed animals. Similar results were obtained with the 500 x g supernatant fluids from liver. In contrast, the specific activities of carnitine acyltransferases of 500 x g supernatant fractions isolated from heart, skeletal muscle, kidney, and testes were the same for fed as fasted animals. The total carnitine content of liver, muscle, heart, and kidney was less in animals fasted for 8 days than in fed animals, but the amount/g of organ was higher in the animals fasted for 8 days. The amount of specific short-chain acylcarnitines in liver, muscle, and heart was determined for both fed and fasted animals. The amount of isobutyrylcarnitine and isovalerylcarnitine increased significantly in muscle from fasted animals. These data are consistent with the previous suggestion that carnitine may have a role in the metabolism of the branched-chain amino acids.  (+info)

Carnitine, acetylcarnitine and the activity of carnitine acyltransferases in seminal plasma and spermatozoa of men, rams and rats. (61/96)

The concentration of total carnitine (i.e. carnitine plus acetylcarnitine) was measured in seminal plasma and spermatozoa of men and rams. In ram semen, there was a close correlation between the concentration of spermatozoa and that of total carnitine in the seminal plasma, indicating that the epididymal secretion was the sole source of seminal carnitine. The percentage of total carnitine present as acetylcarnitine was 40% in seminal plasma and 70-80% in spermatozoa. The acetylation state of carnitine in seminal plasma was apparently not influenced by the metabolic activity of spermatozoa in ejaculated ram semen as no change was found in the plasma concentration of carnitine or acetylcarnitine up to 45 min after ejaculation. In spermatozoa, the activity of carnitine acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.7) was approximately equivalent to that of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.21); and the activity of these enzymes was similar in ram and human spermatozoa but greater in rat spermatozoa. It is concluded that there is no correlation between the content of either total carnitine or the carnitine acyltransferases and the respiratory capacity of spermatozoa.  (+info)

Changes in the activities of the enzymes of hepatic fatty acid oxidation during development of the rat. (62/96)

1. Changes in the activities of several enzymes involved in mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation were measured in livers of developing rats between late foetal life and maturity. The enzymes studied are medium- and long-chain ATP-dependent acyl-CoA synthetases of the outer mitochondrial membrane and matrix, GTP-dependent acyl-CoA synthetase, carnitine acyltransferase, enoyl-CoA hydratase, 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase, general 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase and acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase.  (+info)

Carnitine acyltransferase and acyl-coenzyme A hydrolase activities in human liver. Quantitative analysis of their subcellular localization. (63/96)

The subcellular localizations of carnitine acyltransferase and acyl-CoA hydrolase activities with different chain-length substrates were quantitatively evaluated in human liver by fractionation of total homogenates in metrizamide density gradients and by differential centrifugation. Peroxisomes were found to contain 8-37% of the liver acyltransferase activity, the relative amount depending on the chain length of the substrate. The remaining activity was ascribed to mitochondria, except for carnitine octanoyltransferase, for which 25% of the activity was present in microsomal fractions. In contrast with rat liver, where the activity in peroxisomes is very low or absent, human liver peroxisomes contain about 20% of the carnitine palmitoyltransferase. Short-chain acyl-CoA hydrolase activity was found to be localized mainly in the mitochondrial and soluble compartments, whereas the long-chain activity was present in both microsomal fractions and the soluble compartment. Particle-bound acyl-CoA hydrolase activity for medium-chain substrates exhibited an intermediate distribution, in mitochondria and microsomal fractions, with 30-40% of the activity in the soluble fraction. No acyl-CoA hydrolase activity appears to be present in human liver peroxisomes.  (+info)

Carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase. Inhibition by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate and evidence for separate identity from the pyruvate transporting system of mitochondria. (64/96)

Some of the known inhibitors of pyruvate transport inhibited the activity of carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase. Their order of effectiveness with millimolar concentration required for 50% inhibition given in parentheses, was: Compound UK-5099 (alpha-cyano-beta-(1-phenylindol-3-yl)acrylate) (0.1); alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate (0.17); alpha-cyano-3-hydroxycinnamate (1); alpha-cyanocinnamate (1); alpha-fluorocinnamate (7); transcinnamate (10); p-hydroxycinnamate (10); phenylpyruvate (22); p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (25). Kinetically, the alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate inhibition was mixed and the p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate inhibition was noncompetitive with respect to external (-)-carnitine. The alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate inhibition was reversible and resulted from its ability to act as a thiol reagent. In general, alpha-cyanocinnamate and its derivatives inhibit carnitine transport at concentrations 100 to 5000 times as high as those known to pyruvate transport. At millimolar concentrations, alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate inhibited the mitochondrial transport of molecules other than carnitine as well as the activity of carnitine acyltransferases. Pyruvate and carnitine did not complete for transport into and out of mitochondria. These results establish that transmitochondrial transport mechanisms for carnitine and pyruvate involve different carriers.  (+info)