Publication | Open Access
In Vitro Synthesis of Oleoylglycine by Cytochrome c Points to a Novel Pathway for the Production of Lipid Signaling Molecules
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Citations
32
References
2007
Year
Cytochrome C PointsNovel PathwayMolecular BiologyChemical BiologyRedox BiologyBiosynthesisMetabolismLipid Signaling MoleculesAldehyde DehydrogenaseOxysterolBiochemistryCytochrome CBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisLipid ChemistryMedicineOleoylglycine SynthesisFragmentation Mass SpectrometryLipid SynthesisCarbonyl Metabolism
Long chain fatty acyl glycines represent a new class of signaling molecules whose biosynthetic pathway is unknown. Here we report that cytochrome c catalyzes the formation of oleoylglycine from oleoyl-CoA and glycine, in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. The identity of oleoylglycine product was confirmed by isotope labeling and fragmentation mass spectrometry. Synthesis of oleoylglycine by cytochrome c was dependent upon substrate concentration and time. Other heme-containing proteins, myoglobin and hemoglobin, did not catalyze oleoylglycine synthesis. The functional properties of the reaction closely resemble those observed for the ability of cytochrome c to mediate the synthesis of oleamide from oleoyl-CoA and ammonia, in the presence of hydrogen peroxide (Driscoll, W. J., Chaturvedi., S., and Mueller, G. P. (2007) J. Biol. Chem. 282). The ability of cytochrome c to catalyze the formation of oleoylglycine experimentally indicates the potential importance of cytochrome c as a novel mechanism for the generation of long chain fatty acyl glycine messengers in vivo.
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