Abstract

Acyl-CoAs are present at high concentrations within the cell, yet are strongly buffered by specific binding proteins in order to maintain a low intracellular unbound acyl-CoA concentration, compatible with their metabolic role, their importance in cell signaling, and as protection from their detergent properties. This intracellular regulation may be disrupted by nonmetabolizables acyl-CoA esters of xenobiotics, such as peroxisome proliferators, which are formed at relatively high concentration within the liver cell. The low molecular mass acyl-CoA binding protein (ACBP) and fatty acyl-CoA binding protein (FABP) have been proposed as the buffering system for fatty acyl-CoAs. Whether these proteins also bind xenobiotic-CoA is not known. Here we have identified new liver cytosolic fatty acyl-CoA and xenobiotic-CoA binding sites as glutathione S-transferase (GST), using fluorescent polarization and a acyl-etheno-CoA derivative of the peroxisome proliferator nafenopin as ligand. Rat liver GST and human liver recombinant GSTA1-1, GSTP1-1 and GSTM1-1 were used. Only class alpha rat liver GST and human GSTA1-1 bind xenobiotic-CoAs and fatty acyl-CoAs, with Kd values ranging from 200 nM to 5 microM. One mol of acyl-CoA is bound per mol of dimeric enzyme, and no metabolization or hydrolysis was observed. Binding results in strong inhibition of rat liver GST and human recombinant GSTA1-1 (IC50 at the nanomolar level for palmitoyl-CoA) but not GSTP1-1 and GSTM1-1. Acyl-CoAs do not interact with the GSTA1-1 substrate binding site, but probably with a different domain. Results suggest that under increased acyl-CoA concentration, as occurs after exposure to peroxisome proliferators, acyl-CoA binding to the abundant class alpha GSTs may result in strong inhibition of xenobiotic detoxification. Analysis of the binding properties of GSTs and other acyl-CoA binding proteins suggest that under increased acyl-CoA concentration GSTs would be responsible for xenobiotic-CoA binding whereas ACBP would preferentially bind fatty acyl-CoAs.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call