Biochemical Competition Makes Fatty-Acid β-Oxidation Vulnerable to Substrate Overload

51Citations
Citations of this article
126Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Fatty-acid metabolism plays a key role in acquired and inborn metabolic diseases. To obtain insight into the network dynamics of fatty-acid β-oxidation, we constructed a detailed computational model of the pathway and subjected it to a fat overload condition. The model contains reversible and saturable enzyme-kinetic equations and experimentally determined parameters for rat-liver enzymes. It was validated by adding palmitoyl CoA or palmitoyl carnitine to isolated rat-liver mitochondria: without refitting of measured parameters, the model correctly predicted the β-oxidation flux as well as the time profiles of most acyl-carnitine concentrations. Subsequently, we simulated the condition of obesity by increasing the palmitoyl-CoA concentration. At a high concentration of palmitoyl CoA the β-oxidation became overloaded: the flux dropped and metabolites accumulated. This behavior originated from the competition between acyl CoAs of different chain lengths for a set of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases with overlapping substrate specificity. This effectively induced competitive feedforward inhibition and thereby led to accumulation of CoA-ester intermediates and depletion of free CoA (CoASH). The mitochondrial [NAD+]/[NADH] ratio modulated the sensitivity to substrate overload, revealing a tight interplay between regulation of β-oxidation and mitochondrial respiration. © 2013 van Eunen et al.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

van Eunen, K., Simons, S. M. J., Gerding, A., Bleeker, A., den Besten, G., Touw, C. M. L., … Bakker, B. M. (2013). Biochemical Competition Makes Fatty-Acid β-Oxidation Vulnerable to Substrate Overload. PLoS Computational Biology, 9(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003186

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free