PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2013)

Biochemical competition makes fatty-acid β-oxidation vulnerable to substrate overload.

  • Karen van Eunen,
  • Sereh M J Simons,
  • Albert Gerding,
  • Aycha Bleeker,
  • Gijs den Besten,
  • Catharina M L Touw,
  • Sander M Houten,
  • Bert K Groen,
  • Klaas Krab,
  • Dirk-Jan Reijngoud,
  • Barbara M Bakker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. e1003186

Abstract

Read online

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.