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Title: Photolabeling of soybean microsomal membrane proteins with photoreactive acyl-CoA analogs. Author: Rajasekharan R, Nachiappan V, Roychowdhury HS. Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1994 Mar 15; 220(3):1013-8. PubMed ID: 8143717. Abstract: Synthesis of 32P-labeled 12-azidooleoyl-CoA and 125I-labeled 12-[(azidosalicyl)amino]dodecanoyl-CoA (ASD-CoA) was achieved. The synthesized radioactive, photoreactive reagents were tested as photoaffinity labels for acyl-CoA:lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase from the microsomal membranes of developing soybean cotyledons. When a mixture of microsomal membranes and the azidooleoyl-CoA or ASD-CoA were incubated in the dark, the analogs were recognized as substrate and competitive inhibitor, respectively. The enzyme preferentially utilizes unsaturated acyl-CoAs rather than saturated acyl-CoAs. Incubation of microsomal membranes with acyl-CoA analogs and immediately followed by photolysis resulted in an irreversible inhibition of lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase activity. Analysis of photolyzed microsomal membranes by SDS/PAGE and autoradiography revealed that azidooleoyl-CoA preferentially labeled eight acyl-CoA binding proteins, but ASD-CoA labeled only three polypeptides with molecular masses of 110, 90 and 32 kDa that are commonly labeled by both the analogs. Oleoyl-CoA and dodecanoyl-CoA protect the enzyme against photoinactivation by azidooleoyl-CoA and ASD-CoA, respectively. The protection was profound in 110-kDa polypeptide indicating that this protein could be lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase. These results demonstrate that the photoaffinity of acyl-CoA analogs makes them potential probes to identify and characterize lipid biosynthetic enzymes.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]