Mitochondrial hotdog-fold thioesterase
From Proteopedia
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Them4 is also called Akt C-Terminal Modulator Protein (CTMP), owing to previous data suggesting that it interacts with the serine-threonine protein kinase Akt1 in an inferred mechanism of regulating apoptosis. However, this putative activity is not well defined yet. Through pull-down assays, Zhao ''et al.'' (2012) verified that Them4 and Akt1 form a stable complex and that Them4 inhibits Akt1 activity'' in vitro'', but Akt1 does not inhibit Them4. | Them4 is also called Akt C-Terminal Modulator Protein (CTMP), owing to previous data suggesting that it interacts with the serine-threonine protein kinase Akt1 in an inferred mechanism of regulating apoptosis. However, this putative activity is not well defined yet. Through pull-down assays, Zhao ''et al.'' (2012) verified that Them4 and Akt1 form a stable complex and that Them4 inhibits Akt1 activity'' in vitro'', but Akt1 does not inhibit Them4. | ||
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Revision as of 00:21, 28 May 2024
Overview of thioesterases
Thioesterases are enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of thioester bonds, which are the linkage between a carbonyl and a sulfur atom. The ATP-dependent formation of a thioester bond from a carboxylate and a thiol in biomolecules makes them more reactive and is particularly an important commitment step in lipid metabolism. Therefore, thioesterases counteract this activation by releasing upon hydrolysis a molecule with the more stable carboxylate group. For this reason, thioesterases are found at the end of some metabolic pathways but they also may act as regulators of flux. Besides lipid metabolism, thioester bonds also occur in biosynthetic pathways for polyketide and non-ribosomal peptide production, as well as in main metabolites of carbon metabolism such as acetyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA.
There are two main families of thioesterases which are distinguished by their folding, named the α/β-hydrolases and the hotdog-fold hydrolases. Notably, these two different families are evolutionarily distant, so the thioesterase activity is a shared feature owing to convergent evolution.
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References
Swarbrick, C. M., Nanson, J. D., Patterson, E. I., & Forwood, J. K. (2020). Structure, function, and regulation of thioesterases. Progress in Lipid Research, 79, 101036. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plipres.2020.101036
Caswell, B. T., de Carvalho, C. C., Nguyen, H., Roy, M., Nguyen, T., & Cantu, D. C. (2022). Thioesterase enzyme families: Functions, structures, and mechanisms. Protein Science, 31(3), 652-676. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.4263
Zhao, H., Martin, B. M., Bisoffi, M., & Dunaway-Mariano, D. (2009). The Akt C-terminal modulator protein is an acyl-CoA thioesterase of the Hotdog-Fold family. Biochemistry, 48(24), 5507-5509. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi900710w
Zhao, H., Lim, K., Choudry, A., Latham, J. A., Pathak, M. C., Dominguez, D., ... & Dunaway-Mariano, D. (2012). Correlation of structure and function in the human hotdog-fold enzyme hTHEM4. Biochemistry, 51(33), 6490-6492. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi300968n
Zhuravleva, E., Gut, H., Hynx, D., Marcellin, D., Bleck, C. K., Genoud, C., ... & Hemmings, B. A. (2012). Acyl coenzyme A thioesterase Them5/Acot15 is involved in cardiolipin remodeling and fatty liver development. Molecular and cellular biology, 32(14), 2685-2697. https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.00312-12
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