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Subcellular localization and regulation of coenzyme a synthase

Subcellular localization and regulation of coenzyme a synthase
Subcellular localization and regulation of coenzyme a synthase
CoA synthase mediates the last two steps in the sequence of enzymatic reactions, leading to CoA biosynthesis. We have recently identified cDNA for CoA synthase and demonstrated that it encodes a bifunctional enzyme possessing 4'-phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase and dephospho-CoA kinase activities. Molecular cloning of CoA synthase provided us with necessary tools to study subcellular localization and the regulation of this bifunctional enzyme. Transient expression studies and confocal microscopy allowed us to demonstrate that full-length CoA synthase is associated with the mitochondria, whereas the removal of the N-terminal region relocates the enzyme to the cytosol. In addition, we showed that the N-terminal sequence of CoA synthase ( amino acids 1 - 29) exhibits a hydrophobic profile and targets green fluorescent protein exclusively to mitochondria. Further analysis, involving subcellular fractionation and limited proteolysis, indicated that CoA synthase is localized on the mitochondrial outer membrane. Moreover, we demonstrate for the first time that phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine, which are the main components of the mitochondrial outer membrane, are potent activators of both enzymatic activities of CoA synthase in vitro. Taken together, these data provide the evidence that the final stages of CoA biosynthesis take place on mitochondria and the activity of CoA synthase is regulated by phospholipids.
SYNTHESIZING PROTEIN COMPLEX, MITOCHONDRIAL CONTACT SITES, PANTOTHENATE KINASE, RAT-LIVER, COA BIOSYNTHESIS, ACETYL-COA, HEART, MEMBRANE, METABOLISM, CARNITINE
1083-351X
50316 - 50321
Zhyvoloup, A
5b0b4802-af34-4399-94e7-da217bda2538
Nemazanyy, I
b0613ad8-2293-4a71-9b3d-d700f9366de4
Panasyuk, G
b6601a2f-3f81-4cb1-9c87-fe8b26d007e0
Valovka, T
97346de1-eac0-4e81-b82e-b39f835474f7
Fenton, TR
087260ba-f6a1-405a-85df-099d05810a84
Rebholz, H
1dcf329e-8cfd-4034-a28d-ec2b2c3c946f
Wang, ML
94be8ea1-1dd1-4d64-a01c-86209c94e5d1
Foxon, R
c7c670d1-e442-4fac-a545-662e74e5077f
Lyzogubov, V
6f4cd251-996c-46c7-80a1-0907fb157dd9
Usenko, V
eacca1c3-9293-499a-8edc-7cb9f3d9f151
Kyyamova, R
918d1aee-36b4-4d6d-ac88-30622c6cd7b0
Gorbenko, O
3ced4c68-5ed1-4096-8399-08c0ab3a7491
Matsuka, G
5c9c20b5-446f-4a5c-b2b3-20219d9cd5d5
Filonenko, V
19bb8baa-42b2-41a3-87bc-0cdcccf2f9b6
Gout, IT
7fd0e0ff-a6a5-4579-aea1-fa3c1e80fe23
Zhyvoloup, A
5b0b4802-af34-4399-94e7-da217bda2538
Nemazanyy, I
b0613ad8-2293-4a71-9b3d-d700f9366de4
Panasyuk, G
b6601a2f-3f81-4cb1-9c87-fe8b26d007e0
Valovka, T
97346de1-eac0-4e81-b82e-b39f835474f7
Fenton, TR
087260ba-f6a1-405a-85df-099d05810a84
Rebholz, H
1dcf329e-8cfd-4034-a28d-ec2b2c3c946f
Wang, ML
94be8ea1-1dd1-4d64-a01c-86209c94e5d1
Foxon, R
c7c670d1-e442-4fac-a545-662e74e5077f
Lyzogubov, V
6f4cd251-996c-46c7-80a1-0907fb157dd9
Usenko, V
eacca1c3-9293-499a-8edc-7cb9f3d9f151
Kyyamova, R
918d1aee-36b4-4d6d-ac88-30622c6cd7b0
Gorbenko, O
3ced4c68-5ed1-4096-8399-08c0ab3a7491
Matsuka, G
5c9c20b5-446f-4a5c-b2b3-20219d9cd5d5
Filonenko, V
19bb8baa-42b2-41a3-87bc-0cdcccf2f9b6
Gout, IT
7fd0e0ff-a6a5-4579-aea1-fa3c1e80fe23

Zhyvoloup, A, Nemazanyy, I, Panasyuk, G, Valovka, T, Fenton, TR, Rebholz, H, Wang, ML, Foxon, R, Lyzogubov, V, Usenko, V, Kyyamova, R, Gorbenko, O, Matsuka, G, Filonenko, V and Gout, IT (2003) Subcellular localization and regulation of coenzyme a synthase. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278 (50), 50316 - 50321. (doi:10.1074/jbc.M307763200).

Record type: Article

Abstract

CoA synthase mediates the last two steps in the sequence of enzymatic reactions, leading to CoA biosynthesis. We have recently identified cDNA for CoA synthase and demonstrated that it encodes a bifunctional enzyme possessing 4'-phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase and dephospho-CoA kinase activities. Molecular cloning of CoA synthase provided us with necessary tools to study subcellular localization and the regulation of this bifunctional enzyme. Transient expression studies and confocal microscopy allowed us to demonstrate that full-length CoA synthase is associated with the mitochondria, whereas the removal of the N-terminal region relocates the enzyme to the cytosol. In addition, we showed that the N-terminal sequence of CoA synthase ( amino acids 1 - 29) exhibits a hydrophobic profile and targets green fluorescent protein exclusively to mitochondria. Further analysis, involving subcellular fractionation and limited proteolysis, indicated that CoA synthase is localized on the mitochondrial outer membrane. Moreover, we demonstrate for the first time that phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine, which are the main components of the mitochondrial outer membrane, are potent activators of both enzymatic activities of CoA synthase in vitro. Taken together, these data provide the evidence that the final stages of CoA biosynthesis take place on mitochondria and the activity of CoA synthase is regulated by phospholipids.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 26 September 2003
Published date: 1 December 2003
Keywords: SYNTHESIZING PROTEIN COMPLEX, MITOCHONDRIAL CONTACT SITES, PANTOTHENATE KINASE, RAT-LIVER, COA BIOSYNTHESIS, ACETYL-COA, HEART, MEMBRANE, METABOLISM, CARNITINE

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 454026
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/454026
ISSN: 1083-351X
PURE UUID: bab8a3be-5184-4c98-9ecb-68ac4e2f3c68
ORCID for TR Fenton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4737-8233

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Date deposited: 27 Jan 2022 18:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:11

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Contributors

Author: A Zhyvoloup
Author: I Nemazanyy
Author: G Panasyuk
Author: T Valovka
Author: TR Fenton ORCID iD
Author: H Rebholz
Author: ML Wang
Author: R Foxon
Author: V Lyzogubov
Author: V Usenko
Author: R Kyyamova
Author: O Gorbenko
Author: G Matsuka
Author: V Filonenko
Author: IT Gout

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