1. Identification of fatty acid oxidation disorder patients with lowered acyl-CoA thioesterase activity in human skin fibroblasts.
- Author
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Hunt, M. C., Ruiter, J., Mooyer, P., van Roermond, C. W. T., Ofman, R., Ijlst, L., and Wanders, R. J. A.
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FIBROBLASTS ,CELLS ,CONNECTIVE tissue cells ,FATTY acids ,ENZYMES ,OXIDATION ,PROTEINS - Abstract
Acyl-CoA thioesterases are enzymes that hydrolyze acyl-CoAs to the free fatty acid and coenzyme A (CoASH). These enzymes have been identified in several cellular compartments and are thought to regulate intracellular levels of acyl-CoAs, free fatty acids and CoASH. However, to date no patients deficient in acyl-CoA thioesterases have been identified.Acyl-CoA thioesterase activity was measured in human skin fibroblasts. Western-blot analysis was used to determine Type-II acyl-CoA thioesterase protein levels in patients.Acyl-CoA thioesterase activity was found in human fibroblasts with all saturated acyl-CoAs from C4-CoA to C18-CoA, with highest activity detected with lauroyl-CoA and myristoyl-CoA (C12-CoA and C14-CoA). An antibody that recognizes the major isoforms of Type-II acyl-CoA thioesterases precipitated the majority of acyl-CoA thioesterase activity in fibroblasts, showing that the main thioesterase activity detected in fibroblasts is catalyzed by Type-II thioesterases. Measurement of acyl-CoA thioesterase activity from fibroblasts of 34 patients with putative fatty acid oxidation disorders resulted in the identification of three patients with lowered Type-II acyl-CoA thioesterase activity in fibroblasts. These patients also had lowered expression of Type-II acyl-CoA thioesterase protein in fibroblasts as judged by Western-blot analysis. However, mutation analysis failed to identify any mutation in the coding sequences for the mitochondrial acyl-CoA thioesterase II (MTE-II) or the cytosolic acyl-CoA thioesterase II (CTE-II).We have described three patients with lowered Type-II acyl-CoA thioesterase protein and activity in human skin fibroblasts, which is the first description of patients with a putative defect in acyl-CoA thioesterases.Eur J Clin Invest 2005; 35 (1): 38 –46 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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