Isolation and function of spinach leaf β-ketoacyl-[acyl-carrier-protein] synthases

  1. Takashi Shimakata and
  2. Paul K. Stumpf
  1. 1Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, Davis, California 95616

Abstract

Crude spinach leaf extract readily forms the stearoyl derivative of acyl-carrier-protein (ACP) when acetyl-ACP and malonyl-ACP are incubated together. Palmitoyl-ACP is also elongated by malonyl-ACP to stearoyl-ACP. When β-ketoacyl-ACP synthase {3-oxoacyl-[ACP] synthase; acyl-[ACP]:malonyl-[ACP] C-acyltransferase (decarboxylating), EC 2.3.1.41} is purified with decanoyl-ACP as the assay substrate, palmitoyl-ACP elongation activity is lost. When palmitoyl-ACP is the assay substrate, another protein is isolated that specifically elongates palmitoyl-ACP to β-ketostearoyl-ACP but has no activity towards decanoyl-ACP. The first protein is designated β-ketoacyl-ACP synthase I and participates in the conversion of acetyl-ACP to palmitoyl-ACP, whereas the second protein is designated β-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II, and its substrate specificity is highly restricted to myristoyl-ACP and palmitoyl-ACP. The purification of synthase II is described, and its activity is compared to synthase I. Reconstitution experiments with the highly purified nonassociated enzymes in fatty acid synthesis plus synthases I and II clearly demonstrate the roles of these two proteins in fatty acid synthesis.

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