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      Stability of fatty acyl-coenzyme A thioester ligands of hepatocyte nuclear factor-4alpha and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha.

      Lipids
      Acyl Coenzyme A, analysis, chemistry, metabolism, Animals, Carrier Proteins, Crystallization, Diazepam Binding Inhibitor, Drug Stability, Escherichia coli, genetics, Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins, Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4, isolation & purification, Ligands, Mice, PPAR alpha, Rabbits, Rats, Recombinant Proteins

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          Abstract

          Although long-chain fatty acyl-coenzyme A (LCFA-CoA) thioesters are specific high-affinity ligands for hepatocyte nuclear factor-4alpha (HNF-4alpha) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPARalpha), X-ray crystals of the respective purified recombinant ligand-binding domains (LBD) do not contain LCFA-CoA, but instead exhibit bound LCFA or have lost all ligands during the purification process, respectively. As shown herein: (i) The acyl chain composition of LCFA bound to recombinant HNF-4alpha reflected that of the bacterial LCFA-CoA pool, rather than the bacterial LCFA pool. (ii) Bacteria used to produce the respective HNF-4alpha and PPARalpha contained nearly 100-fold less LCFA-CoA than LCFA. (iii) Under conditions used to crystallize LBD (at least 3 wk at room temperature in aqueous buffer), 16:1-CoA was very unstable in buffer alone. (iv) In the presence of the respective nuclear receptor (i.e., HNF-4alpha and PPARalpha), LBD 70-75% of 16:1-CoA was degraded after 1 d at room temperature in the crystallization buffer, whereas as much as 94-97% of 16:1-CoA was degraded by 3 wk. (v) Cytoplasmic LCFA-CoA binding proteins such as acyl-CoA binding protein, sterol carrier protein-2, and liver-FA binding protein slowed the process of 16:1-CoA degradation proportional to their respective affinities for this ligand. Taken together, these data for the first time indicated that the absence of LCFA-CoA in the crystallized HNF-4alpha and PPARalpha was due to the paucity of LCFA-CoA in bacteria as well as to the instability of LCFA-CoA in aqueous buffers and the conditions used for LBD crystallization. Furthermore, instead of protecting bound LCFA-CoA from autohydrolysis like several cytoplasmic LCFA-CoA binding proteins, these nuclear receptors facilitated LCFA-CoA degradation.

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