EQUILIBRIUM-CONSTANTS FOR THE BINDING OF FATTY-ACIDS WITH FATTY-ACID-BINDING PROTEINS FROM ADIPOCYTE, INTESTINE, HEART, AND LIVER MEASURED WITH THE FLUORESCENT-PROBE ADIFAB
Gv. Richieri et al., EQUILIBRIUM-CONSTANTS FOR THE BINDING OF FATTY-ACIDS WITH FATTY-ACID-BINDING PROTEINS FROM ADIPOCYTE, INTESTINE, HEART, AND LIVER MEASURED WITH THE FLUORESCENT-PROBE ADIFAB, The Journal of biological chemistry, 269(39), 1994, pp. 23918-23930
Affinities of long chain fatty acids (FA) for fatty acid-binding prote
ins (FABPs) have been measured by monitoring the concentrations of the
unbound or free fatty acids (FFA) in equilibrium with the FABPs using
the fluorescent probe ADIFAB. This probe allows the measurement of th
e concentration of FFA in equilibrium with FABPs, without physical sep
aration of any of the reactants. Equilibrium characteristics were meas
ured at 37 degrees C for palmitate, stearate, oleate, linoleate, linol
enate, and arachidonate binding to six FABPs from intestine, heart, ad
ipose, and liver from different species. Equilibrium constants for eac
h FA were found to be extremely sensitive to the tissue origin of the
FABP but largely independent of species differences. The measured valu
es of the dissociation constants (K-d) ranged from about 2 to 1000 nM,
depending upon the tissue origin of the FABP and the FA. Binding cons
tants for some FABPs varied considerably with different FA, as much as
80-fold in the case of the intestinal FABP. In contrast, K-d values f
or adipocyte FABPs exhibited less than 4-fold variation with FA type a
nd are generally larger (lower affinities) than for the other FABPs. F
or all FABPs, K-d values for fatty acids with the same chain length we
re considerably lower for saturated as compared to polyunsaturated FA.
This characteristic likely reflects the lower aqueous solubilities of
the saturated fatty acids. In contrast to the other FABPs, rat liver
FABP was found to have two FA-binding sites/ monomer. Each of these tw
o sites had similar high affinities for the saturated FA,while for the
unsaturated FA the two sites exhibited affinities that differ by more
than 7-fold. This study disagrees with earlier investigations in find
ing that equilibrium binding of FA to FABPs is a sensitive function of
FA type and FABP tissue origin and that FA-FABP dissociation constant
s are submicromolar. These results provide a framework with which to u
nderstand better the biological function of FABPs and the FA-FABP inte
raction.