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A Plasma Protein Network Regulates PM20D1 and N-Acyl Amino Acid Bioactivity.

Citation
Kim, J. T., et al. “A Plasma Protein Network Regulates Pm20D1 And N-Acyl Amino Acid Bioactivity.”. Cell Chemical Biology, pp. 1130-1139.e4.
Center Stanford University
Author Joon T Kim, Mark P Jedrychowski, Wei Wei, Daniel Fernandez, Curt R Fischer, Steven M Banik, Bruce M Spiegelman, Jonathan Z Long
Keywords ApoE, Alzheimer, HDL, LDL, N-acyl amino acid, PM20D1, circulating, lipids, lipoprotein, obesity, plasma
Abstract

N-acyl amino acids are a family of cold-inducible circulating lipids that stimulate thermogenesis. Their biosynthesis is mediated by a secreted enzyme called PM20D1. The extracellular mechanisms that regulate PM20D1 or N-acyl amino acid activity in the complex environment of blood plasma remains unknown. Using quantitative proteomics, here we show that PM20D1 circulates in tight association with both low- and high-density lipoproteins. Lipoprotein particles are powerful co-activators of PM20D1 activity in vitro and N-acyl amino acid biosynthesis in vivo. We also identify serum albumin as a physiologic N-acyl amino acid carrier, which spatially segregates N-acyl amino acids away from their sites of production, confers resistance to hydrolytic degradation, and establishes an equilibrium between thermogenic "free" versus inactive "bound" fractions. These data establish lipoprotein particles as principal extracellular sites of N-acyl amino acid biosynthesis and identify a lipoprotein-albumin network that regulates the activity of a circulating thermogenic lipid family.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Cell chemical biology
Volume
27
Issue
9
Number of Pages
1130-1139.e4
Date Published
09/2020
ISSN Number
2451-9448
DOI
10.1016/j.chembiol.2020.04.009
Alternate Journal
Cell Chem Biol
PMID
32402239
PMCID
PMC7502524
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