Shimeno H, Okamura N, Wali A, Kishimoto Y
Arch Biochem Biophys. 1983 May;223(1):95-106. doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(83)90575-1.
Lignoceric acid and other very long-chain fatty acids are converted to alpha-hydroxy fatty acids and ceramide in brain. These fatty acids are also oxidized and produce glutamic acid and other water-soluble products. All of these metabolic conversions are catalyzed by a rat brain particulate fraction and require NADPH, heat-labile factor, and heat-stable factor. The heat-stable factor was prepared from calf cerebellum. Glucose 6-phosphate and N-acetylaspartic acid have previously been identified as active components of the heat-stable factor. We report in this manuscript that glutamic acid, glutamine, aspartic acid, and gamma-aminobutyric acid as well as inorganic phosphate and adenosine nucleotides are also active components of the heat-stable factor. When the amino acids, glucose 6-phosphate, AMP, and phosphoric acid were combined, full activity of the heat-stable factor for the formation of cerebronate (by alpha-hydroxylation) and glutamate (presumably by beta-oxidation) from lignoceric acid was recovered. The role of the acidic amino acids in the metabolic conversion of lignoceric acid in brain appears to be their conversion to the corresponding alpha-keto acids and then incorporation into the TCA cycle. Glucose 6-phosphate is also likely to be involved in the TCA cycle through the Emden-Meyerhof pathway. Inorganic phosphate and AMP seemingly are used to produce ATP. However, the addition of up to 20 mM ATP alone did not replace the heat-stable factor.