Fatty acids are a major source of energy for cardiac myocytes. Changes in fatty acid metabolism have been implicated as causal in diabetes and cardiac disease. The mechanism by which long chain fatty acids (LCFAs) enter cardiac myocytes is not well understood but appears to occur predominantly by protein-mediated transport. Here we report the cloning, expression pattern, and subcellular localization of a novel member of the fatty acid transport protein (FATP) family termed FATP6. FATP6 is principally expressed in the heart where it is the predominant FATP family member. Similar to other FATPs, transient and stable transfection of FATP6 into 293 cells enhanced uptake of LCFAs. FATP6 mRNA was localized to cardiac myocytes by in situ hybridization. Immunofluorescence microscopy of FATP6 in monkey and murine hearts revealed that the protein is exclusively located on the sarcolemma. FATP6 was restricted in its distribution to areas of the plasma membrane juxtaposed with small blood vessels. In these membrane domains FATP6 also colocalizes with another molecule involved in LCFA uptake, CD36. These findings suggest that FATP6 is involved in heart LCFA uptake, in which it may play a role in the pathogenesis of lipid-related cardiac disorders.
The high resolution refined structures of 23 enzymes were analyzed to determine the properties of amino acids involved in active site regions. These regions were found to be rich in G-X-Y or Y-X-G oligopeptides, where X and Y are polar and non-polar residues, respectively, that are small and with low polarity. Other regions of the enzyme molecules have significantly fewer of these sequences. These features suggest that glycine residues may provide flexibility necessary for enzyme active sites to change conformation, and the G-X-Y or Y-X-G oligopeptides may be a motif for the formation of enzyme active sites.
Hybrid precoding is a promising technique for mmWave massive MIMO systems, as it can considerably reduce the number of required radio-frequency (RF) chains without obvious performance loss. However, most of the existing hybrid precoding schemes require a complicated phase shifter network, which still involves high energy consumption. In this paper, we propose an energy-efficient hybrid precoding architecture, where the analog part is realized by a small number of switches and inverters instead of a large number of high-resolution phase shifters. Our analysis proves that the performance gap between the proposed hybrid precoding architecture and the traditional one is small and keeps constant when the number of antennas goes to infinity. Then, inspired by the cross-entropy (CE) optimization developed in machine learning, we propose an adaptive CE (ACE)-based hybrid precoding scheme for this new architecture. It aims to adaptively update the probability distributions of the elements in hybrid precoder by minimizing the CE, which can generate a solution close to the optimal one with a sufficiently high probability. Simulation results verify that our scheme can achieve the near-optimal sum-rate performance and much higher energy efficiency than traditional schemes.
Fatty acid transport protein-4 (FATP4) is the major FATP in the small intestine. We previously demonstrated, using in vitro antisense experiments, that FATP4 is required for fatty acid uptake into intestinal epithelial cells. To further examine the physiological role of FATP4, mice carrying a targeted deletion of FATP4 were generated. Deletion of one allele of FATP4 resulted in 48% reduction of FATP4 protein levels and a 40% reduction of fatty acid uptake by isolated enterocytes. However, loss of one FATP4 allele did not cause any detectable effects on fat absorption on either a normal or a high fat diet. Deletion of both FATP4 alleles resulted in embryonic lethality as crosses between heterozygous FATP4 parents resulted in no homozygous offspring; furthermore, no homozygous embryos were detected as early as day 9.5 of gestation. Early embryonic lethality has been observed with deletion of other genes involved in lipid absorption in the small intestine, namely microsomal triglyceride transfer protein and apolipoprotein B, and has been attributed to a requirement for fat absorption early in embryonic development across the visceral endoderm. In mice, the extraembryonic endoderm supplies nutrients to the embryo prior to development of a chorioallantoic placenta. In wild-type mice we found that FATP4 protein is highly expressed by the epithelial cells of the visceral endoderm and localized to the brush-border membrane of extraembryonic endodermal cells. This localization is consistent with a role for FATP4 in fat absorption in early embryogenesis and suggests a novel requirement for FATP4 function during development.
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