In the circulation, non-esterified fatty acids are transported by albumin which also facilitates their removal from donor cells and uptake into receptor cells. We have studied whether genetic variations in the albumin molecule can affect its in vivo fatty acid-binding properties. The fatty acids bound to 25 structurally different variants and to their wildtype counterparts, isolated from heterozygous carriers, were determined gas chromatographically. The variants were proalbumins, albumins with single amino acid substitutions and glycosylated or truncated albumins. In eight cases the total amount bound to the variants was diminished (0.4-0.8-fold), and in seven cases the load was increased to 1.3 or more of normal. Twenty-one fatty acids were quantitated, and for 19 alloalbumins significant deviations from normal were found. Usually, changes in total and individual fatty acid binding were of the same type, but several exceptions to this rule was found. The glycosylated albumin Casebrook showed the largest changes, the total load and the amount of bound palmitate was 8.6 and 14 times, respectively, the normal. The most pronounced changes and the majority of cases of increased binding were caused by molecular changes in domain III. Mutations in domain I, II and the propeptide resulted in smaller effects, if any, and these were often reductions in binding

Effect of genetic variation on the fatty acid-binding properties of human serum albumin and proalbumin.

MINCHIOTTI, LORENZO;GALLIANO, MONICA;
1997-01-01

Abstract

In the circulation, non-esterified fatty acids are transported by albumin which also facilitates their removal from donor cells and uptake into receptor cells. We have studied whether genetic variations in the albumin molecule can affect its in vivo fatty acid-binding properties. The fatty acids bound to 25 structurally different variants and to their wildtype counterparts, isolated from heterozygous carriers, were determined gas chromatographically. The variants were proalbumins, albumins with single amino acid substitutions and glycosylated or truncated albumins. In eight cases the total amount bound to the variants was diminished (0.4-0.8-fold), and in seven cases the load was increased to 1.3 or more of normal. Twenty-one fatty acids were quantitated, and for 19 alloalbumins significant deviations from normal were found. Usually, changes in total and individual fatty acid binding were of the same type, but several exceptions to this rule was found. The glycosylated albumin Casebrook showed the largest changes, the total load and the amount of bound palmitate was 8.6 and 14 times, respectively, the normal. The most pronounced changes and the majority of cases of increased binding were caused by molecular changes in domain III. Mutations in domain I, II and the propeptide resulted in smaller effects, if any, and these were often reductions in binding
1997
Biochemistry & Biophysics focuses on the structure and chemistry of biomolecules and covers all aspects of basic biochemistry/biophysics, including molecular structure, enzyme kinetics and protein-protein interaction; this category also contains cross-disciplinary resources focused on a specific class of biological molecules, e.g., nucleic acids, steroids, magnesium, growth factors, free radicals, bio-membranes, and peptides. Excluded are resources dealing with the application of biochemical techniques to specific topics listed elsewhere in CC/LS. Resources with a strong emphasis on the integration of biochemical pathways (such as signal transduction or molecular motors) at the cellular level are placed in the Cell & Developmental Biology category.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
1342
2
191
204
14
Human serum albumin; genetic variant
9
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Nielsen, H; Kragh Hansen, U; Minchiotti, Lorenzo; Galliano, Monica; Brennan, So; Tárnoky, Al; Franco, Mh; Salzano, Fm; Sugita, O.
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/461636
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