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Compartmentation of hepatic fatty-acid-binding protein in liver cells and its effect on microsomal phosphatidic acid biosynthesis.

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TLDR
Application of the postembedding protein A-gold labeling method with antibody against the hepatic type fatty-acid-binding protein (hFABP) to cross-sections of liver cells and a newly developed gel-chromatographic immunofluorescence assay established qualitatively that hF ABP in mitochondria was confined to outer mitochondrial membranes.
Abstract
Fatty-acid-binding proteins are known to occur in the cytosol of mammalian cells and to bind fatty acids and their CoA-esters. Application of the postembedding protein A-gold labeling method with antibody against the hepatic type fatty-acid-binding protein (hFABP) to cross-sections of liver cells and a newly developed gel-chromatographic immunofluorescence assay established qualitatively (1) that hFABP in mitochondria was confined to outer mitochondrial membranes, (2) the presence of this protein in microsomes and (3) that nuclei were also filled with hFABP. Quantitative data elaborated with a non-competitive ELISA confirmed these results. A significant difference to the distribution of cardiac FABP in heart muscle cells, where this type of protein was found in cytosol, matrix and nuclei, was observed (Borchers et al. (1989) Biochim. Biophys. Acta, in the press). hFABP-containing rat liver microsomes were incubated with long-chain acyl-CoAs in the presence of hFABP (isolated from rat liver cytosol) in a study on the acylation of sn-glycerol-3-phosphate and lysophosphatidic acid. Both acyltransferases were stimulated by addition of hFABP to the incubation medium. The morphological, immunochemical as well as kinetic data infer a direct interaction of hFABP with microsomal membranes in liver cells.

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Role of long-chain fatty acyl-CoA esters in the regulation of metabolism and in cell signalling.

TL;DR: The observations that the ryanodine-senstitive Ca2+-release channel is regulated by long-chain acyl-CoA esters in the presence of a molar excess of acyl -CoA binding protein and that acetyl- coA carboxylase, the AMP kinase kinase and the Escherichia coli transcription factor FadR are affected by low nanomolar concentrations of Acyl- CoA indicate that long- chain acyl
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of gene expression by dietary fat

TL;DR: The effects of fatty acids on the genome provide new insight into how dietary fat might play a role in health and disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

New insights into the structure and function of fatty acid-binding proteins.

TL;DR: A review of recent findings on the diversity of FABPs and their proposed roles in fatty acid (FA) metabolism and other cellular processes focuses on mammalian FABP types.
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Fatty acids and hypolipidemic drugs regulate peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors α- and γ-mediated gene expression via liver fatty acid binding protein: A signaling path to the nucleus

TL;DR: In localization studies using laser-scanning microscopy, it is shown that L-FABP and PPARα colocalize in the nucleus of mouse primary hepatocytes and it is demonstrated that the observed interaction of both proteins is independent of ligand binding.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An electron-transport system associated with the outer membrane of liver mitochondria. A biochemical and morphological study.

TL;DR: Experiments with tritiated NADH are described which demonstrate that this "external" pathway of NADH oxidation resembles stereochemically the NADH-cytochrome c reductase system of liver microsomes, and differs from the respiratory chain-linked NADH dehydrogenase.
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Mitochondria and glyoxysomes from castor bean endosperm. Enzyme constitutents and catalytic capacity.

TL;DR: With the use of isolated particle preparations, isotopic evidence supporting this conclusion that all enzymatic activities observed in the glyoxysome are sufficient to support rates of acetate metabolism that are greater than those known to be occurring in the intact tissue is obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation and partial characterization of a fatty acid binding protein in rat liver plasma membranes

TL;DR: Immunofluorescence studies localized the antigen in liver-cell plasma membranes as well as in other major sites of fatty acid transport, compatible with the hypothesis that this protein may act as a receptor in a hepatocellular uptake mechanism for fatty acids.
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