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Mitochondrial Protein Acetylation as a Cell-Intrinsic, Evolutionary Driver of Fat Storage: Chemical and Metabolic Logic of Acetyl-Lysine Modifications.
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Mitochondrial Protein Acetylation as a Cell-Intrinsic, Evolutionary Driver of Fat Storage: Chemical and Metabolic Logic of Acetyl-Lysine Modifications.

Sirisha Ghanta, Ruth E. Grossmann and Charles Brenner
Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology, Vol.48(6), pp.561-574
11/01/2013
DOI: 10.3109/10409238.2013.838204
PMID: 24050258
url
http://doi.org/10.3109/10409238.2013.838204View
Open Access

Abstract

Hormone systems evolved over 500 million years of animal natural history to motivate feeding behavior and convert excess calories to fat. These systems produced vertebrates, including humans, who are famine-resistant but sensitive to obesity in environments of persistent overnutrition. We looked for cell-intrinsic metabolic features, which might have been subject to an evolutionary drive favoring lipogenesis. Mitochondrial protein acetylation appears to be such a system. Because mitochondrial acetyl-coA is the central mediator of fuel oxidation and is saturable, this metabolite is postulated to be the fundamental indicator of energy excess, which imprints a memory of nutritional imbalances by covalent modification. Fungal and invertebrate mitochondria have highly acetylated mitochondrial proteomes without an apparent mitochondrially targeted protein lysine acetyltransferase. Thus, mitochondrial acetylation is hypothesized to have evolved as a nonenzymatic phenomenon. Because the pKa of a nonperturbed Lys is 10.4 and linkage of a carbonyl carbon to an ε amino group cannot be formed with a protonated Lys, we hypothesize that acetylation occurs on residues with depressed pKa values, accounting for the propensity of acetylation to hit active sites and suggesting that regulatory Lys residues may have been under selective pressure to avoid or attract acetylation throughout animal evolution. In addition, a shortage of mitochondrial oxaloacetate under ketotic conditions can explain why macronutrient insufficiency also produces mitochondrial hyperacetylation. Reduced mitochondrial activity during times of overnutrition and undernutrition would improve fitness by virtue of resource conservation. Micronutrient insufficiency is predicted to exacerbate mitochondrial hyperacetylation. Nicotinamide riboside and Sirt3 activity are predicted to relieve mitochondrial inhibition.

Nursing Energy Metabolism Lipid Metabolism Acetylation Animals Caloric Restriction Humans Lipids Lipogenesis Lysine Mitochondria Mitochondrial Proteins Niacinamide Oxaloacetic Acid Oxidation-Reduction Sirtuin 3

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