| Literature DB >> 26423520 |
Jose Iglesias1, Julien Lamontagne1, Heidi Erb1, Sari Gezzar1, Shangang Zhao1, Erik Joly1, Vouy Linh Truong2, Kathryn Skorey2, Sheldon Crane2, S R Murthy Madiraju3, Marc Prentki3.
Abstract
Lipids are used as cellular building blocks and condensed energy stores and also act as signaling molecules. The glycerolipid/ fatty acid cycle, encompassing lipolysis and lipogenesis, generates many lipid signals. Reliable procedures are not available for measuring activities of several lipolytic enzymes for the purposes of drug screening, and this resulted in questionable selectivity of various known lipase inhibitors. We now describe simple assays for lipolytic enzymes, including adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL), hormone sensitive lipase (HSL), sn-1-diacylglycerol lipase (DAGL), monoacylglycerol lipase, α/β-hydrolase domain 6, and carboxylesterase 1 (CES1) using recombinant human and mouse enzymes either in cell extracts or using purified enzymes. We observed that many of the reported inhibitors lack specificity. Thus, Cay10499 (HSL inhibitor) and RHC20867 (DAGL inhibitor) also inhibit other lipases. Marked differences in the inhibitor sensitivities of human ATGL and HSL compared with the corresponding mouse enzymes was noticed. Thus, ATGListatin inhibited mouse ATGL but not human ATGL, and the HSL inhibitors WWL11 and Compound 13f were effective against mouse enzyme but much less potent against human enzyme. Many of these lipase inhibitors also inhibited human CES1. Results describe reliable assays for measuring lipase activities that are amenable for drug screening and also caution about the specificity of the many earlier described lipase inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: adipose triglyceride lipase; alpha/beta hydrolase domain 6; diacylglycerol lipase; fatty acid amide hydrolase; hormone sensitive lipase; monoacylglycerol lipase
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26423520 PMCID: PMC4689331 DOI: 10.1194/jlr.D058438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Lipid Res ISSN: 0022-2275 Impact factor: 5.922