Abstract

Mammalian fatty acid synthetase carrying a 3-keto, 3-hydroxy, or 2-enoyl acyl-enzyme intermediate on the 4'-phosphopantetheine thiol is reversibly inhibited by binding of NADP to the enoyl reductase domain. Acyl moieties which can normally leave the enzyme by thioester hydrolysis or by transfer to a CoA acceptor cannot readily be removed from the NADP-inhibited enzyme; in addition, 3-keto or 2-enoyl moieties attached to the enzyme 4'-phosphopantetheine cannot readily be reduced when NADP is replaced by NADPH, even though model substrates can be reduced immediately. Reactivation of the NADP-inhibited 3-ketoacyl-enzyme, by exposure to NADPH, is paralleled by reduction and dehydration of the 3-ketoacyl moiety to a saturated acyl moiety without accumulation of either the 3-hydroxy or 2-enoyl acyl-enzyme intermediates, indicating that once the 4'-phosphopantetheine engages the ketoacyl moiety in the ketoreductase domain, subsequent reactions occur very rapidly. The results are consistent with a hypothesis which proposes that NADP binding to the enoyl reductase domain of fatty acid synthetase carrying an acyl intermediate other than a saturated moiety induces a conformational change in the enzyme that results in decreased mobility of the 4'-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group. Normal mobility of the prosthetic group, essential for transfer of acyl-enzyme intermediates through the active sites of the various functional domains, is restored relatively slowly when NADP is replaced by NADPH. It remains to be determined whether this modulation by pyridine nucleotides observed in vitro plays a role in the regulation of fatty acid synthetase activity in vivo.

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