Pa. Watkins et al., PHYTANIC ACID MUST BE ACTIVATED TO PHYTANOYL-COA PRIOR TO ITS ALPHA-OXIDATION IN RAT-LIVER PEROXISOMES, Biochimica et biophysica acta, L. Lipids and lipid metabolism, 1214(3), 1994, pp. 288-294
alpha-Oxidation of the branched-chain fatty acid, phytanic acid, is de
fective in patients with Refsum's disease, the disorders of peroxisome
biogenesis (e.g., Zellweger syndrome), and in rhizomelic chondrodyspl
asia punctata. H-3-Release from [2,3-H-3]phytanic acid, which is impai
red in cultured skin fibroblasts from these patients, was investigated
in rat liver peroxisomes. Cofactors necessary for optimal H-3-release
, ATP, Mg2+ and coenzyme A, were also necessary for optimal acyl-CoA s
ynthetase activity, suggesting that the substrate for H-3-release migh
t be phytanoyl-CoA. 5,8,11,14-Eicosatetraynoic acid (ETYA), an inhibit
or of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase activity, blocked phytanoyl-CoA s
ynthesis as well as H-3-release from [2,3-H-3]phytanic acid in a dose-
dependent manner. However, this inhibitor had little effect on H-3-rel
ease from [2,3-H-3]phytanoyl-CoA. Tetradecylglycidic acid (TDGA) inhib
ited H-3-release from [2,3-H-3]phytanic acid in peroxisomal but not in
mitochondrial fractions from rat liver. This agent inhibited H-3-rele
ase from [2,3-H-3]phytanic acid and [2,3-H-3]phytanoyl-CoA equally. In
contrast to ETYA, which appeared to decrease H-3-release as a consequ
ence of synthetase inhibition, TDGA appeared to act directly on the en
zyme catalyzing H-3-release. This enzyme was partially purified from r
at liver. The purified enzyme, which did not possess phytanoyl-CoA syn
thetase activity, catalyzed tritium release from [2,3-H-3]phytanoyl-Co
A. This enzyme catalyzed H-3-release from [2,3-H-3]phytanic acid only
if a source of phytanoyl-CoA synthetase was present. We conclude that
in rat liver peroxisomes, phytanic acid must be activated to its coenz
yme A derivative prior to subsequent alpha-oxidation.