Malonyl-CoA, fuel sensing, and insulin resistance
1 Diabetes Unit, Section of Endocrinology and Departments of Medicine and Physiology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02118; and 2 Endocrine-Metabolism Division, Department of Medicine and Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 Malonyl-CoA is a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology: endocrinology and metabolism 1999-01, Vol.276 (1), p.E1-E18 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1 Diabetes Unit, Section of
Endocrinology and Departments of Medicine and Physiology, Boston
University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02118; and
2 Endocrine-Metabolism Division,
Department of Medicine and Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School,
Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
Malonyl-CoA is an allosteric inhibitor of carnitine
palmitoyltransferase (CPT) I, the enzyme that controls the transfer of long-chain fatty acyl (LCFA)-CoAs into the mitochondria where they are
oxidized. In rat skeletal muscle, the formation of malonyl-CoA is
regulated acutely (in minutes) by changes in the activity of the
-isoform of acetyl-CoA carboxylase
(ACC ). This can occur by at
least two mechanisms: one involving cytosolic citrate, an allosteric
activator of ACC and a
precursor of its substrate cytosolic acetyl-CoA, and the other
involving changes in ACC phosphorylation. Increases in cytosolic citrate leading to an increase
in the concentration of malonyl-CoA occur when muscle is presented with
insulin and glucose, or when it is made inactive by denervation, in
keeping with a diminished need for fatty acid oxidation in these
situations. Conversely, during exercise, when the need of the muscle
cell for fatty acid oxidation is increased, decreases in the ATP/AMP
and/or creatine phosphate-to-creatine ratios activate an
isoform of an AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), which phosphorylates
ACC and inhibits both its basal activity and activation by citrate. The central role of cytosolic citrate links this malonyl-CoA regulatory mechanism to the
glucose-fatty acid cycle concept of Randle et al. (P. J. Randle, P. B. Garland. C. N. Hales, and E. A. Newsholme.
Lancet 1: 785-789, 1963) and to a
mechanism by which glucose might autoregulate its own use. A similar
citrate-mediated malonyl-CoA regulatory mechanism appears to exist in
other tissues, including the pancreatic -cell, the heart, and
probably the central nervous system. It is our hypothesis that by
altering the cytosolic concentrations of LCFA-CoA and diacylglycerol,
and secondarily the activity of one or more protein kinase C isoforms,
changes in malonyl-CoA provide a link between fuel metabolism and
signal transduction in these cells. It is also our hypothesis that
dysregulation of the malonyl-CoA regulatory mechanism, if it leads to
sustained increases in the concentrations of malonyl-CoA and cytosolic
LCFA-CoA, could play a key role in the pathogenesis of insulin
resistance in muscle. That it may contribute to abnorm |
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ISSN: | 0193-1849 0002-9513 1522-1555 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpendo.1999.276.1.e1 |