Rat brain contains substantial concentrations of free malonate (192 nmol/g wet weight) but origin and biological importance of the dicarboxylic acid are poorly understood. A dietary source has been excluded. A recently described malonyl-CoA decarboxylase deficiency is associated with malonic aciduria and clinical manifestations, including mental retardation. In an effort to study the metabolic origin of free malonate, several labeled acetyl-CoA precursors were administered by intracerebral injection. [2-14C]pyruvate or [1,5-14C]citrate produced radioactive glutamate but failed to label malonate. In contrast, [1-14C]acetate, [2-14C]acetate, and [1-14C]butyrate were converted to labeled glutamate and malonate after the same route of administration. The intracerebral injection of [1-14C]-beta-alanine as a precursor of malonic semialdehyde and possibly free malonate did not give rise to radioactivity in the dicarboxylate. The labeling pattern of malonic acid is compatible with the reaction sequence: acetyl-CoA----malonyl-CoA----malonate. The final step is thought to occur by transfer of the CoA-group from malonyl-CoA to succinate and/or acetoacetate. Labeling of malonate from acetate is most effective at the age of 7 days when the net concentration of the dicarboxylic acid in rat brain is still very low. At this age, butyrate was a better precursor of malonate than acetate. It is proposed that fatty acid oxidation provides the acetyl-CoA which functions as the precursor of free brain malonate. Compartmentation of malonate biosynthesis is likely because the acetyl-CoA precursors citrate and pyruvate are ineffective.
Malonate is an effective inhibitor of succinate dehydrogenase in preparations from brain and other organs. This property was reexamined in isolated rat brain mitochondria during incubation with L-glutamate. The biosynthesis of aspartate was determined by a standard spectrofluorometric method and a radiometric technique. The latter was suitable for aspartate assay after very brief incubations of mitochondria with glutamate. At a concentration of 1 mM or higher, malonate totally inhibited aspartate biosynthesis. At 0.2 mM, the inhibitory effect was still present. It is thus possible that the natural concentration of free malonate in adult rat brain of 192 nmol/g wet weight exerts an effect on citric acid cycle reactions in vivo. The inhibition of glutamate utilization by malonate was readily overcome by the addition of malate which provided oxaloacetate for the transamination of glutamate. The reaction was accompanied by the accumulation of 2-oxoglutarate. The metabolism of glutamate was also blocked by inclusion of arsenite and gamma-vinyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid but again added malate allowed transamination to resume. When arsenite and gamma-vinyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid were present, the role of malonate as an inhibitor of malate entry into the mitochondrial interior could be determined without considering the inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase. The apparent Km and Vmax values for uninhibited malate entry were 0.01 mM and 100 nmol/mg protein/min, respectively. Malonate was a competitive inhibitor of malate transport (Ki = 0.75 mM).
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