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Cloning, expression, and fatty acid regulation of the human delta-5 desaturase.

Arachidonic (20:4(n-6)), eicosapentaenoic (20:5(n-3)), and docosahexaenoic (22:6(n-3)) acids are major components of brain and retina phospholipids, substrates for eicosanoid production, and regulators of nuclear transcription factors. One of the two rate-limiting steps in the production of these polyenoic fatty acids is the desaturation of 20:3(n-6) and 20:4(n-3) by Delta-5 desaturase. This report describes the cloning and expression of the human Delta-5 desaturase, and it compares the structural characteristics and nutritional regulation of the Delta-5 and Delta-6 desaturases. The open reading frame of the human Delta-5 desaturase encodes a 444-amino acid peptide which is identical in size to the Delta-6 desaturase and which shares 61% identity with the human Delta-6 desaturase. The Delta-5 desaturase contains two membrane-spanning domains, three histidine-rich regions, and a cytochrome b(5) domain that all align perfectly with the same domains located in the Delta-6 desaturase. Expression of the open reading frame in Chinese hamster ovary cells instilled the ability to convert 20:3(n-6) to 20:4(n-6). Northern analysis revealed that many human tissues including skeletal muscle, lung, placenta, kidney, and pancreas expressed Delta-5 desaturase mRNA, but Delta-5 desaturase was most abundant in the liver, brain, and heart. However, in all tissues, the abundance of Delta-5 desaturase mRNA was much lower than that observed for the Delta-6 desaturase. When rats were fed a diet containing 10% safflower oil or menhaden fish oil, the level of hepatic mRNA for Delta-5 and Delta-6 desaturase was only 25% of that found in the liver of rats fed a fat-free diet or a diet containing triolein. Finally, a BLAST and Genemap search of the human genome revealed that the Delta-5 and Delta-6 desaturase genes reside in reverse orientation on chromosome 11 and that they are separated by <11,000 base pairs.[1]

References

  1. Cloning, expression, and fatty acid regulation of the human delta-5 desaturase. Cho, H.P., Nakamura, M., Clarke, S.D. J. Biol. Chem. (1999) [Pubmed]
 
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