| Literature DB >> 20846931 |
Chad Brocker1, Christopher Carpenter, Daniel W Nebert, Vasilis Vasiliou.
Abstract
The acyl-CoA thioesterase gene (ACOT ) family encodes enzymes that catalyse the hydrolysis of acyl-CoA thioester compounds, also known as activated fatty acids, to their corresponding non-esterified (free) fatty acid and coenzyme A (CoASH). These enzymes play a very important role in lipid metabolism by maintaining cellular levels and proper ratios of free and activated fatty acids, as well as CoASH. Within the acyl-CoA family there are two distinct subgroups, type I and type II. Despite catalysing the same reaction, the two groups are not structurally similar and do not share sequence homology, strongly suggesting convergent evolution. This suggestion is further supported if one compares the human with the mouse and rat ACOT gene families. To date, four human type I ACOTs have been identified which belong to the α/β-hydrolase fold enzyme superfamily. Type II ACOTs fall into the 'hot dog' fold superfamily. There are currently six human type II genes; however, two homologous proteins, thioesterase superfamily members 4 (THEM4) and 5 (THEM5) share common type II structural features and, in the case of THEM4, acyl-CoA thioesterase activity--suggesting that the family may be larger than previously realised. Although recent studies have greatly expanded the current understanding of these proteins and their physiological importance, there are a number of members whose functions are relatively unexplored and which warrant further investigation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20846931 PMCID: PMC3525216 DOI: 10.1186/1479-7364-4-6-411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
List of all human (ACOT) with full gene name, aliases, chromosomal location, isoforms, NCBI RefSeq mRNA accession number, NCBI RefSeq protein accession number and total amino acid number (AA#)
| Gene | Full gene name | Aliases | Chromosome | Isoforms | Ref mRNA | Ref protein | AA# |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acyl-CoA | ACH2, | 14q24.3 | NM001037161.1 | NP001032238 | 421 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | MTE1, PTE2, | 14q24.3 | NM006821.4 | NP006812.3 | 483 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | FLJ31235, | 14q24.3 | NM152331.3 | NP689544.3 | 421 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | C14orf42, | 14q24.3 | NM001037162.1 | NP001032239.1 | 207 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | BACH, | 1p36.31-p36.11 | hBACHa | NM007274.3 | NP009205.3 | 370 | |
| hBACHb | NM181864.2 | NP863654.1 | 380 | ||||
| hBACHc | NM181865.2 | NP863655.1 | 350 | ||||
| hBACHd | NM181866.2 | NP863656.1 | 329 | ||||
| Acyl-CoA | hTE, PTE1, | 20q13.12 | NM005469.2 | NP005460.2 | 319 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | CGI-16, | Xp22.11 | Isoform a | NM001037171.1 | NP001032248.1 | 448 | |
| Isoform b | NM001033583.2 | NP001028755.2 | 439 | ||||
| Acyl-CoA | BFIT, THEA, | 1p32.3 | BFIT1 | NM015547.2 | NP056362.1 | 607 | |
| BFIT2 | NM147161.2 | NP671517.1 | 594 | ||||
| Acyl-CoA | Cach, | 5q14.1 | NM130767.2 | NP570123.1 | 555 | ||
| Acyl-CoA | THEM2, | 6p22.3 | Isoform 1 | NM018473.3 | NP060943.1 | 140 | |
| Isoform 2 | NM018473.3 | NP060943.1 | 117 | ||||
| Thioesterase superfamily member 4 | CTMP, | 1q21 | NM053055.3 | NP444283.2 | 240 | ||
| Thioesterase superfamily member 5 | FLJ37964; | 1q21.3 | NM182578.3 | NP872384.1 | 247 |
Figure 1Domain organisation of human type I and type II acyl-CoA thioesterases (ACOTs). Closest homologues (BAAT, THEM4 and THEM5) are included for comparison. Abbreviations: ACTH, acyl-CoA thioester hydrolase domain; BAAT, bile acid CoA:amino acid N-acyltransferase; EL, esterase-lipase domain; HD, 'hot dog' fold domain; START, steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR)-related lipid transfer (START) domain; THEM, thioesterase superfamily member.
Amino acid sequence identity between type I and type II human acyl-CoA thioesterases (ACOTs).
| 98% | ||||||||
| 70% | 70% | |||||||
| 57% | 57% | 54% | ||||||
| 45% | 45% | 45% | 37% | |||||
| -- | ||||||||
| 19% | -- | |||||||
| 22% | -- | -- | ||||||
| 24% | -- | 22% | 51% | |||||
| -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ||||
| -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 22% | |||
| -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 37% |
Identity was determined using BLASTP and non-redundant human protein sequences. The predominant isoform sequences were used for ACOTs having multiple protein variants. Homology was considered not significant and left blank if the observed identity was less than 15 per cent
Abbreviations: BAAT, bile acid CoA:amino acid N-acyltransferase; THEM, thioesterase superfamily member
Figure 2Acyl-CoA thioesterase (ACOT) type I and type II cladograms. Cladograms depicting the evolutionary relationships between human, mouse (m) and rat (r) orthologous protein sequences for type I (A) and type II (B) ACOTs. Phylogenetic trees were created using ClustalW2. Human carboxylesterase 1 (CES1) is an unrelated esterase that was added simply to 'ground' the tree.
Figure 3Unrooted dendrogram of human acyl-CoA thioesterases (ACOTs). Phylogenetic tree created using ClustalW2 and edited using TreeIllustrator. ACHE and CES1 were included as distant homologues belonging to the α/β-hydrolase fold superfamily. Bile acid acetyl Co-A:amino acid N-acyltransferase (BAAT), thioesterase superfamily members 4 and 5 (THEM4 and THEM5) are the closest-related homologues to type I (BAAT) and type II sequences (THEM4 and THEM5). ACTB was included as an unrelated sequence used to ground the tree. Type I ACOT branches are highlighted in blue, whereas type II are in red. Abbreviations: ACHE, acetylcholinesterase; ACTB; β-actin; CES1, carboxylesterase 1