Acetyl-Coenzyme A 3Li
Acetylation and fatty acid biosynthesis cofactor / Essential cofactor for cellular metabolism, being an ‘activated acetate’ that shuttles its moieties back and forth during anabolic, catabolic, and metabolic processes involving fundamental molecules: fatty acids, amino acids, glucose, and ATP.1 In the laboratory, it can be used as a substrate in chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) transcription reporter assays2 or in histone acetyltransferase (HAT) assays in epigenetics research3.
Biochemicals & reagents
75520-41-1
AcCoA; Acetyl-CoA; Acetyl Coenzyme A trilithium salt trihydrate
Wolfe (2005), The acetate switch; Mol. Biol. Rev. 69 12 Gorman et al. (1982), Recombinant genomes which express chloramphenicol acetyltransferase in mammalian cells; Mol. Cell Biol. 2 1044 Kim et al. (2000), A continuous, nonradioactive assay for histone acetyltransferases; Anal. Biochem. 280 308
-20°C
PATHWAY: Fatty acid metabolism; Carbohydrate metabolism; Posttranslational modification; Transcription -- RESEARCH AREA: Epigenetics