Journal of Lipid Research (Feb 2016)

Association of NMT2 with the acyl-CoA carrier ACBD6 protects the N-myristoyltransferase reaction from palmitoyl-CoA[S]

  • Eric Soupene,
  • Joseph Kao,
  • Daniel H. Cheng,
  • Derek Wang,
  • Alexander L. Greninger,
  • Giselle M. Knudsen,
  • Joseph L. DeRisi,
  • Frans A. Kuypers

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 2
pp. 288 – 298

Abstract

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The covalent attachment of a 14-carbon aliphatic tail on a glycine residue of nascent translated peptide chains is catalyzed in human cells by two N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) enzymes using the rare myristoyl-CoA (C14-CoA) molecule as fatty acid donor. Although, NMT enzymes can only transfer a myristate group, they lack specificity for C14-CoA and can also bind the far more abundant palmitoyl-CoA (C16-CoA) molecule. We determined that the acyl-CoA binding protein, acyl-CoA binding domain (ACBD)6, stimulated the NMT reaction of NMT2. This stimulatory effect required interaction between ACBD6 and NMT2, and was enhanced by binding of ACBD6 to its ligand, C18:2-CoA. ACBD6 also interacted with the second human NMT enzyme, NMT1. The presence of ACBD6 prevented competition of the NMT reaction by C16-CoA. Mutants of ACBD6 that were either deficient in ligand binding to the N-terminal ACBD or unable to interact with NMT2 did not stimulate activity of NMT2, nor could they protect the enzyme from utilizing the competitor C16-CoA. These results indicate that ACBD6 can locally sequester C16-CoA and prevent its access to the enzyme binding site via interaction with NMT2. Thus, the ligand binding properties of the NMT/ACBD6 complex can explain how the NMT reaction can proceed in the presence of the very abundant competitive substrate, C16-CoA.

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