Abstract

We previously showed that a fraction of the acetyls used to synthesize malonyl-CoA in rat heart derives from partial peroxisomal oxidation of very long and long-chain fatty acids. The 13C labeling ratio (malonyl-CoA)/(acetyl moiety of citrate) was >1.0 with 13C-fatty acids, which yields [13C]acetyl-CoA in both mitochondria and peroxisomes and < 1.0 with substrates, which yields [13C]acetyl-CoA only in mitochondria. In this study, we tested the influence of 13C-fatty acid concentration and chain length on the labeling of acetyl-CoA formed in mitochondria and/or peroxisomes. Hearts were perfused with increasing concentrations of labeled docosanoate, oleate, octanoate, hexanoate, butyrate, acetate, or dodecanedioate. In contrast to the liver, peroxisomal oxidation of 1-13C-fatty acids in heart does not form [1-13C]acetate. With [1-13C]docosanoate and [1,12-13C2]dodecanedioate, malonyl-CoA enrichment plateaued at 11 and 9%, respectively, with no detectable labeling of the acetyl moiety of citrate. Thus, in the intact rat heart, docosanoate and dodecanedioate appear to be oxidized only in peroxisomes. With [1-13C]oleate or [1-13C]octanoate, the labeling ratio >1 indicates the partial peroxisomal oxidation of oleate and octanoate. In contrast, with [3-13C]octanoate, [1-13C]hexanoate, [1-13C]butyrate, or [1,2-13C2]acetate, the labeling ratio was <0.7 at all concentrations. Therefore, in rat heart, (i) n-fatty acids shorter than 8 carbons do not undergo peroxisomal oxidation, (ii) octanoate undergoes only one cycle of peroxisomal beta-oxidation, (iii) there is no detectable transfer to the mitochondria of acetyl-CoA from the cytosol or the peroxisomes, and (iv) the capacity of C2-C18 fatty acids to generate mitochondrial acetyl-CoA decreases with chain length.

Highlights

  • We previously showed that a fraction of the acetyls used to synthesize malonyl-CoA in rat heart derives from partial peroxisomal oxidation of very long and long-chain fatty acids

  • In rat heart, (i) n-fatty acids shorter than 8 carbons do not undergo peroxisomal oxidation, (ii) octanoate undergoes only one cycle of peroxisomal ␤-oxidation, (iii) there is no detectable transfer to the mitochondria of acetyl-CoA from the cytosol or the peroxisomes, and (iv) the capacity of C2–C18 fatty acids to generate mitochondrial acetyl-CoA decreases with chain length

  • Malonyl-CoA is synthesized by acetyl-CoA carboxylase 2, which appears to be attached to the outer membrane of mitochondria facing the cytosol [2, 3]

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Summary

Introduction

We previously showed that a fraction of the acetyls used to synthesize malonyl-CoA in rat heart derives from partial peroxisomal oxidation of very long and long-chain fatty acids. Hearts were perfused with increasing concentrations of labeled docosanoate, oleate, octanoate, hexanoate, butyrate, acetate, or dodecanedioate. With [1-13C]docosanoate and [1,1213C2]dodecanedioate, malonyl-CoA enrichment plateaued at 11 and 9%, respectively, with no detectable labeling of the acetyl moiety of citrate.

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