Abstract

Significant advances have been made in the past few years in our understanding of the mechanism of synthesis of fatty acids, the structural organization of fatty acid synthetase complexes and the mechanism of regulation of activity of these enzyme systems. Numerous fatty acid synthetase complexes have been purified to homogeneity and the mechanism of synthesis of fatty acids by these enzyme systems has been ascertained from tracer, and recently, kinetic studies. The results obtained by these methods are in complete agreement. Furthermore, the kinetic results have indicated that fatty acid synthesis proceeds by a seven-site ping-pong mechanism. Several of the fatty acid synthetases have been dissociated completely to nonidentical half-molecular weight subunit species and these have been separated by affinity chromatography. From one of these subunits acyl carrier protein has been obtained. Whether the nonidentical subunits can be dissociated into individual proteins or whether these subunits are each comprised of one peptide is still a matter of controversy. However, it appears to us that each of the half-molecular weight subunits is indeed comprised of individual proteins. Studies on the regulation of activity of fatty acid synthetase complexes of avian and mammalian liver have resulted in the separation by affinity chromatography of three species (apo, holo- a and holo- b ) of fatty acid synthetase. Since these species have radically different enzyme activities they may provide a mechanism of short-term regulation of fatty acid synthetase activity. Other studies have shown that the quantity of avian and mammalian liver fatty acid synthetases is controlled by a change in the rate of synthesis of this enzyme complex. This change in the rate of synthesis of enzyme complex is under the control of insulin and glucagon. The former hormone increases the rate of enzyme synthesis, whereas the latter decreases it. Further studies on fatty acid synthetase complexes will undoubtedly concentrate upon more refined aspects of the structural organization of these enzyme systems, including the sequencing of acyl carrier proteins, the effects of protein-protein interaction on the kinetics of the partial reactions of fatty acid synthesis catalyzed by separated enzymes of the complex, the mechanism of hormonal regulation of fatty acid synthetase activity and x-ray diffraction analysis of subunits and complex.

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