Document Type
Article
Rights
Available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike 4.0 International Licence
Disciplines
Biochemistry and molecular biology
Abstract
Coenzyme A (CoASH) is an obligate cofactor for lipids undergoing β-oxidation in peroxisomes. Although the peroxisomal membrane appears to be impermeable to CoASH, peroxisomes contain their own pool of CoASH. It is believed that CoASH enters peroxisomes as acyl-CoAs, but it is not known how this pool is regulated. The mouse nudix hydrolase 7 (NUDT7α) was previously identified in peroxisomes as a CoAdiphosphatase, and therefore suggested to be involved in regulation of peroxisomal CoASH levels. Here we show that mouse NUDT7α mainly acts as an acyl-CoA diphosphatase, with highest activity towards medium chain acyl-CoAs, and much lower activity with CoASH. Nudt7α mRNA is highly expressed in liver, brown adipose tissue and heart, similar to enzymes involved in peroxisomal lipid degradation. Nudt7α mRNA is downregulated by Wy-14,643, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) ligand, in a PPARα dependent manner in mouse liver. In highly purified peroxisomes, nudix hydrolase activity is highest with C6-CoA and is decreased by fibrate treatment. Under certain conditions, such as treatment with peroxisome proliferators or fasting, an increase in peroxisomal CoASH levels has been reported, which is in line with a decreased expression/activity of NUDT7α. Taken together these data suggest that NUDT7α function is tightly linked to peroxisomal CoASH/acyl-CoA homeostasis.
DOI
10.1093/jb/mvn114
Recommended Citation
Reilly, S., Tillander, V., Ofman, R., Alexson, S., Hunt, M.: The Nudix Hydrolase 7 is an Acyl-CoA Diphosphatase Involved in Regulating Peroxisomal Coenzyme A Homeostasis. Journal of Biochemistry (2008) 144(5): 655-663 doi:10.1093/jb/mvn114
Publication Details
The Journal of Biochemistry (2008)144(5):655-663 first published online September 17, 2008 doi:10.1093/jb/mvn114