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Cooperative enzymatic control of N-acyl amino acids by PM20D1 and FAAH.

Citation
Kim, J. T., et al. “Cooperative Enzymatic Control Of N-Acyl Amino Acids By Pm20D1 And Faah.”. Elife.
Center Stanford University
Author Joon T Kim, Stephanie M Terrell, Veronica L Li, Wei Wei, Curt R Fischer, Jonathan Z Long
Keywords FAAH, N-acyl amino acid, PM20D1, biochemistry, chemical biology, enzyme, lipids, mouse, signaling
Abstract

The N-acyl amino acids are a family of bioactive lipids with pleiotropic physiologic functions, including in energy homeostasis. Their endogenous levels are regulated by an extracellular mammalian N-acyl amino acid synthase/hydrolase called PM20D1 (peptidase M20 domain containing 1). Using an activity-guided biochemical approach, we report the molecular identification of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) as a second intracellular N-acyl amino acid synthase/hydrolase. In vitro, FAAH exhibits a more restricted substrate scope compared to PM20D1. In mice, genetic ablation or selective pharmacological inhibition of FAAH bidirectionally dysregulates intracellular, but not circulating, N-acyl amino acids. Dual blockade of both PM20D1 and FAAH reveals a dramatic and non-additive biochemical engagement of these two enzymatic pathways. These data establish FAAH as a second intracellular pathway for N-acyl amino acid metabolism and underscore enzymatic division of labor as an enabling strategy for the regulation of a structurally diverse bioactive lipid family.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
eLife
Volume
9
Date Published
04/2020
ISSN Number
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.55211
Alternate Journal
Elife
PMID
32271712
PMCID
PMC7145423
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