| Literature DB >> 20932325 |
Paul A Watkins1, Ann B Moser, Cicely B Toomer, Steven J Steinberg, Hugo W Moser, Mazen W Karaman, Krishna Ramaswamy, Kimberly D Siegmund, D Rick Lee, John J Ely, Oliver A Ryder, Joseph G Hacia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been proposed that anatomical differences in human and great ape guts arose in response to species-specific diets and energy demands. To investigate functional genomic consequences of these differences, we compared their physiological levels of phytanic acid, a branched chain fatty acid that can be derived from the microbial degradation of chlorophyll in ruminant guts. Humans who accumulate large stores of phytanic acid commonly develop cerebellar ataxia, peripheral polyneuropathy, and retinitis pigmentosa in addition to other medical conditions. Furthermore, phytanic acid is an activator of the PPAR-alpha transcription factor that influences the expression of genes relevant to lipid metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20932325 PMCID: PMC2964658 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6793-10-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Physiol ISSN: 1472-6793
Figure 1Phytanic acid catabolism in mammals. Phytanic acid in ruminant fats is derived from phytol produced during the bacterial degradation of chlorophyll in their rumen (first stomach). After conversion to its CoA thioester, phytanic acid undergoes α-oxidation, yielding pristanic acid. This fatty acid then undergoes three subsequent rounds of β-oxidation in the peroxisome. The resulting medium chain fatty acid exits the peroxisome and translocates to the mitochondrion where the remaining carbon chain is degraded by β-oxidation. Abbreviations for the enzymes listed include: HACL1 (aka HPCL2) = 2-hydroxyphytanoyl-CoA lyase; PHYH = phytanoyl-CoA α-hydroxylase; PDH = pristanal dehydrogenase, whose gene is not yet known. We note that phytanic acid can also be degraded by β-oxidation; however, this activity of this pathway is relatively minor [40,44].
Figure 2Phytanic acid levels in human and great ape red blood cells. Box plots representing the percentage of phytanic acid relative to total fatty acids from red blood cells are provided. Median, quartile 1, quartile 3, minimum, and maximum values are provided. In Panels A and B, the species (Hsa: human; Ptr: chimpanzee; Ppa: bonobo; Ggo: gorilla; Ppy: orangutan), human diet (V: vegan, W: western), and number of individuals successfully analyzed is provided on the X-axes. Blood donor sex (M: male, F: female) is provided in Panel B.
Figure 3Phytanic acid catabolism in human and great ape cultured fibroblasts. Box plots representing the relative rates of (A) phytanic acid and (B) pristanic acid oxidation in cultured fibroblasts are provided. Median, quartile 1, quartile 3, minimum, and maximum values are provided. The species and number of samples successfully analyzed is provided on the X-axis of both panels.
Figure 4Differential expression of genes related to peroxisomal lipid metabolism. We reanalyzed of Affymetrix GeneChip U133v2.0 expression profiles of human and chimpanzee tissues [51] using the masking strategy stated in the text. We used standard F-tests (FDR-adjusted using the Benjamini and Hochberg approach) to test for differences in the distributions by species for the 5 tissues. The fold change (FC) of human (Hsa) versus chimpanzee (Ptr) geometric mean gene expression scores are provided. Differentially expressed genes (≥1.2 FC in either direction with a Student's t-test, two-tailed P-value ≤0.05 after Bonferroni correction) for a given tissue are highlighted in red (higher in human) or green (higher in chimpanzee). Probe sets with (i) F-tests yielding a ≤5% FDR and (ii) differential expression in at least one tissue are shown. All data are provided in Additional File 3.