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1.
Rabbit alveolar macrophage microsomes were found to acylate 1-[3H]alkyl-glycero-3-phosphocholine (GPC) (lyso platelet-activating factor) in the absence of any cofactors, indicating the presence of transacylation activity. The transacylation activity was comparable to the activity of acyl-CoA:1-alkyl-GPC acyltransferase. The fatty acyl moieties introduced into 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC from membrane lipids by microsomes were mainly 20:4 (n-6). A very similar acylation profile was observed for the acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC in intact macrophages, suggesting that the CoA-independent transacylation system plays a very important part in the acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC in cells. We also confirmed that 14C-labeled 20:4(n-6), 20:5(n-3), 22:4(n-6), and 22:6(n-3) were transferred well from diacyl-GPC to 1-alkyl-GPC in a CoA-independent manner. The transfer rates for 16:0, 18:0, and 18:1 from diacyl-GPC to 1-alkyl-GPC were very low in the presence and absence of CoA. On the other hand, the transfer of 20:4 from diacyl-GPE or diacyl-GPI to 1-alkyl-GPC or 1-acyl-GPC was markedly increased by the addition of CoA. The above results indicate that the transacylation system exhibits distinct donor and acceptor selectivities and CoA dependency. These transacylation reactions could be very important in the regulation of the levels and the availability of lysophospholipids, including lyso platelet-activating factor, and C20 and C22 polyunsaturated fatty acids in living cells.  相似文献   

2.
The conversion of 1-[14C]acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine into molecular species of [14C]phosphatidylserine was studied using rat liver homogenate and microsomal preparations in the absence of added fatty acyl moieties. In liver homogenates, 81% of the newly-formed phosphatidylserines were tetraenoic (arachidonoyl) species while saturated, monoenoic, dienoic, trienoic, pentaenoic, and hexaenoic (docosahexaenoyl) species each represented 2-5% of the total. A similar pattern of molecular species was produced in liver microsomes. The selectivity of the microsomal acyl-CoA:1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine acyltransferase towards different acyl-CoA derivatives was also investigated. The relative suitability of the various acyl-CoA esters as substrates was found to be of the following order:20:4 = 18:2 greater than 18:1 greater than 16:0 = 18:0. These results with endogenous acyl donors suggest that the acylation of 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine may partly account for the enrichment of liver phosphatidylserine in arachidonic acid but does not appear to be primarily responsible for the preponderance of docosahexaenoic acid in this phospholipid. The fatty acid specificity of the acyl-CoA: 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine acyltransferase may contribute to the preferential formation of arachidonoyl phosphatidylserine.  相似文献   

3.
The activities of three acylation systems for 1-alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine (1-alkenyl-GPE), 1-acyl-GPE and 1-acylglycerophosphocholine (1-acyl-GPC) were compared in rat brain microsomes and the acyl selectivity of each system was clarified. The rate of CoA-independent transacylation of 1-[3H]alkenyl-GPE (approx. 4.5 nmol/10 min per mg protein) was about twice as high as in the case of 1-[3H]acyl-GPE and 1-[14C]acyl-GPC. On the other hand, the rates of CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation (acylation of free fatty acids by acyl-CoA synthetase and acyl-CoA acyltransferase) of lysophospholipids were in the order 1-acyl-GPC greater than 1-acyl-GPE much greater than 1-alkenyl-GPE. HPLC analysis of newly synthesized molecular species revealed that the CoA-independent transacylation system exclusively esterified docosahexaenoate and arachidonate, regardless of the lysophospholipid class. The CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation systems were almost the same with respect to the selectivities for unsaturated fatty acids when the same acceptor lysophospholipid was used, but some distinctive acyl selectivities were observed with different acceptor lysophospholipids. 1-Alkenyl-GPE selectively acquired only oleate in these two systems. 1-Acyl-GPE and 1-acyl-GPC showed selectivities for both arachidonate and oleate. In addition, an appreciable amount of palmitate was transferred to 1-acyl-GPC, not to 1-acyl-GPE, in CoA- or CoA + ATP-dependent manner. The acylation of exogenously added acyl-CoA revealed that the acyl selectivities of the CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation systems may be mainly governed through the selective action of acyl-CoA acyltransferase. The preferential utilization of oleoyl-CoA by all acceptors and the different utilization of arachidonoyl-CoA between alkenyl and acyllysophospholipids indicated that there might be two distinct acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases that discriminate between oleoyl-CoA and arachidonoyl-CoA, respectively. Our present results clearly show that all three microsomal acylation systems can be active in the reacylation of three major brain glycerophospholipids and that the higher contribution of the CoA-independent system in the reacylation of ethanolamine glycerophospholipids, especially alkenylacyl-GPE, may tend to enrich docosahexaenoate in these phospholipids, as compared with in the case of diacyl-GPC.  相似文献   

4.
Although the acylation of 1-alkenylglycerophosphocholine in mammalian heart is well documented, the acylation of 1-alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine in the heart was not reported. In this study, the presence of acyl CoA: 1-alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase in the guinea pig heart microsomes was demonstrated. 1-Alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase displayed a high degree of specificity towards acyl-CoA. The order of reactivity with acyl-CoA was found to be: linoleoyl much greater than arachidonyl greater than palmitoyl greater than stearoyl = oleoyl. 1-Acylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase in the microsomes also exhibited specificity towards acyl-CoA in the following manner: linoleoyl greater than arachidonyl much greater than palmitoyl greater than oleoyl greater than stearoyl. However, such specificity appeared to be dependent on acyl-CoA concentration. The acyl-CoA specificities of both enzymes did not correlate with the C-2 acyl distribution observed in the corresponding microsomal phospholipids. Our results suggest that in addition to the acyl specificity of the acyltransferases, intracellular concentrations of acyl-CoAs may also have an important role in determining the observed acyl patterns of the phospholipids. Based on the acyl specificities, pH profiles, and their responses to heat inactivation and thiol reagents, we conclude that 1-alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase and 1-acylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase in guinea-pig heart microsomes are not the same enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism involved in the enzymic acylation of 1-[3H]alkylglycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (1-[3H]alkyl-GPE) in brain microsomes was investigated in comparison with the acylation of 1-[3H]alkylglycero-3-phosphocholine (1-[3H]alkyl-GPC). Both the alkyllsophospholipids were acylated without exogenously added cofactors to similar extents. The [14C]arachidonoyl moiety of exogenously added 1-stearoyl-2-[14C]arachidonoyl-GPC was transferred to the alkyllysophospholipids and the transfer was not inhibited by exogenously added free arachidonate. These results indicated that the transferase activity was due to a transacylase that catalyzes the transfer of fatty acids between intact phospholipids. The addition of CoA increased the acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC two or three times with a high acceptor concentration, and the highest rate of acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC was observed in the presence of CoA, ATP, and Mg2+. On the other hand, the addition of such cofactors only slightly increased the acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPE. HPLC analysis revealed that docosahexaenoate and arachidonate were transferred to the second position of both [3H]alkyllysophospholipids without cofactors and that other fatty acids were transferred to much lower extents. With the addition of cofactors, the acylation of 1-[3H]alkyl-GPC by both docosahexaenoate and arachidonate increased 1.5-2 times, and high amounts of palmitate, oleate, and linoleate were newly transferred. High amounts of oleate were also transferred to 1-[3H]alkyl-GPE in the presence of cofactors but the acylation by both docosahexaenoate and arachidonate scarcely increased on the addition of these cofactors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Incubation of rat or human post-heparin plasma with [3H]dolichol incorporated in liposomes consisting of dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine:dioleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (3:1) resulted in the formation of radioactive dolichyl oleate. Non-heparinized plasma did not esterify dolichol, and, hence, the enzyme involved is probably associated with the cell surface and released into the blood by heparin. The major location of this activity was the liver, and, therefore, a partial purification of the enzyme from heparinized rat liver perfusates was performed using DEAE-Sephacel and heparin-Sepharose chromatography. The dolichol acyltransferase activity copurified with hepatic lipase activity in a lipid-protein complex of 350 kDa. Optimal acylation is achieved at pH 7.5 in the presence of 5% plasma and 20 mM Ca2+. Esterification can only be obtained when dolichol is present in a phospholipid bilayer, and the reaction is strongly stimulated by unsaturated phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylserine. Radiolabeling experiments demonstrated that the primary acyl donor is phosphatidylethanolamine from which the fatty acid is transferred exclusively from position 1. Neither cholesterol nor retinol are esterified by the enzyme, and the reaction is not stimulated by acyl-CoA. Both the extracellular localization and the mechanism of transacylation clearly distinguish this new enzyme from the acyl-CoA:dolichol acyltransferase described earlier in microsomes.  相似文献   

7.
CoA-dependent transacylation activity in microsomes catalyzes the transfer of fatty acid between phospholipids and lysophospholipids in the presence of CoA without the generation of free fatty acid. We examined the mechanism of the transacylation system using partially purified acyl-CoA:lysophosphatidylinositol (LPI) acyltransferase (LPIAT) from rat liver microsomes to test our hypothesis that both the reverse and forward reactions of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases are involved in the CoA-dependent transacylation process. The purified LPIAT fraction exhibited ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthetic activity and CoA-dependent LPI generation from PI, suggesting that LPIAT could operate in reverse to form acyl-CoA and LPI. CoA-dependent acylation of LPI by the purified LPIAT fraction required PI as the acyl donor. In addition, the combination of purified LPIAT and recombinant lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase could reconstitute CoA-dependent transacylation between PI and phosphatidic acid. These results suggest that the CoA-dependent transacylation system consists of the following: 1) acyl-CoA synthesis from phospholipid through the reverse action of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases; and 2) transfer of fatty acyl moiety from the newly formed acyl-CoA to lysophospholipid through the forward action of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases.  相似文献   

8.
A novel pathway for lipid biosynthesis: the direct acylation of glycerol.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The acylation of glycerol-3-phosphate by acyl-CoA is regarded as the first committed step for the synthesis of the lipoidal moiety in glycerolipids. The direct acylation of glycerol in mammalian tissues has not been demonstrated. In this study, lipid biosynthesis in myoblasts and hepatocytes was reassessed by conducting pulse-chase experiments with [1,3-(3)H]glycerol. The results demonstrated that a portion of labeled glycerol was directly acylated to form monoacylglycerol and, subsequently, diacylglycerol and triacylglycerol. The direct acylation of glycerol became more prominent when the glycerol-3-phosphate pathway was attenuated or when exogenous glycerol levels became elevated. Glycerol:acyl-CoA acyltransferase activity, which is responsible for the direct acylation of glycerol, was detected in the microsomal fraction of heart, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, and brain tissues. The enzyme from pig heart microsomes displayed optimal activity at pH 6.0 and the preference for arachidonyl-CoA as the acyl donor. The apparent K(m) values for glycerol and arachidonyl-CoA were 1.1 mM and 0.17 mM, respectively. The present study demonstrates the existence of a novel lipid biosynthetic pathway that may be important during hyperglycerolemia produced in diabetes or other pathological conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Microsomes isolated from the developing cotyledons of the seeds of the safflower varieties, very-high-linoleate, Gila and high-oleate, were capable of exchanging the acyl groups in acyl-CoA with the fatty acids in position 2 of phosphatidylcholine. The specificity of the 'acyl-exchange' towards the acyl moiety in acyl-CoA was selective in the order: oleate greater than linoleate greater than linolenate. Stearoyl-CoA was completely selected against when presented in a mixed substrate with unsaturated 18-carbon acyl-CoAs. Microsomes, of the very-high-linoleate safflower variety, rapidly desaturated in situ-labelled [14C]oleoylphosphatidylcholine in the presence of NADH. Little oleate desaturation, however, was observed in the microsomes of the high-oleate variety. Microsomes of the Gila and high-oleate varieties of safflower rapidly synthesised phosphatidic acid by the acylation of glycerol 3-phosphate with acyl-CoA. The phosphatidic acid was metabolised to diacylglycerol, which was further acylated to triacylglycerol. A strong selectivity for linoleoyl-CoA was found for the acylation of glycerol 3-phosphate in both the Gila and high-oleate microsomes. On the basis of these results, we propose that the pattern of 18-carbon unsaturated fatty acids in the triacylglycerols of all 'oil'-producing seeds is a direct reflection of the fatty acids in the acyl-CoA pool. This, in turn, is governed by: A, the rate and specificity of the acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and phosphatidylcholine; B, the rate of oleate (and linoleate) desaturation in phosphatidylcholine; and C, the rate and specificity of the glycerophosphate acyltransferase.  相似文献   

10.
Coenzyme A-dependent transacylation system in rabbit liver microsomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The activities of cofactor-independent and CoA-dependent transacylation were examined for various rabbit tissues. Liver microsomes were found to exhibit relatively high CoA-dependent transacylation activity, while the cofactor-independent transacylation activity was low. The apparent Km values for CoA were 1.4 microM (acceptor, 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (1-acyl-GPC] and 3.8 microM (acceptor, 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (1-acyl-GPE], respectively. The apparent Vmax values were 2.6 nmol/min/mg (1-acyl-GPC) and 1.2 nmol/min/mg (1-acyl-GPE), respectively. The CoA-dependent transacylation reaction shows a distinct fatty acid specificity. [14C]18:2 and [14C]20:4 at the 2-positions and [14C]18:0 at the 1-positions of donor phospholipids were transferred to lysophospholipids in the presence of CoA. We observed the formation of considerable amounts of acyl-CoA from these fatty acids during the reaction, without the participation of ATP. The transfer of other fatty acids between phospholipids was shown to be almost nil. The very low transfer of 18:1 was in marked contrast to the effective utilization of 18:1-CoA by acyl-CoA:1-acyl-GPC acyltransferase. The effects of several compounds and heat treatment on these two acylation reactions were also examined. The CoA-dependent transacylation reaction may be important for the selective acylation of certain lysophospholipids, such as 1-acyl-GPE, in living cells with the cooperation of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferase, which generates CoA for the former reaction.  相似文献   

11.
The incorporation of unsaturated acyl chains into phospholipids during de novo synthesis is primarily mediated by the 1-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase reaction. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Slc1 has been shown to mediate this reaction, but distinct activity remains after its removal from the genome. To identify the enzyme that mediates the remaining activity, we performed synthetic genetic array analysis using a slc1Delta strain. One of the genes identified by the screen, LPT1, was found to encode for an acyltransferase that uses a variety of lysophospholipid species, including 1-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphate. Deletion of LPT1 had a minimal effect on 1-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity, but overexpression increased activity 7-fold. Deletion of LPT1 abrogated the esterification of other lysophospholipids, and overexpression increased lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase activity 7-fold. The majority of this activity co-purified with microsomes. To test the putative role for this enzyme in selectively incorporating unsaturated acyl chains into phospholipids in vitro, substrate concentration series experiments were performed with the four acyl-CoA species commonly found in yeast. Although the saturated palmitoyl-CoA and stearoyl-CoA showed a lower apparent Km, the monounsaturated palmitoleoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA showed a higher apparent Vmax. Arachidonyl-CoA, although not abundant in yeast, also had a high apparent Vmax. Pulse-labeling of lpt1Delta strains showed a 30% reduction in [3H]oleate incorporation into phosphatidylcholine only. Therefore, Lpt1p, a member of the membrane-bound o-acyltransferase gene family, seems to work in conjunction with Slc1 to mediate the incorporation of unsaturated acyl chains into the sn-2 position of phospholipids.  相似文献   

12.
In vitro acylation of the transferrin receptor   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In vitro fatty acylation of the transferrin receptor with [3H]tetradecanoate or [3H]tetradecanoyl-CoA has been demonstrated for isolated sheep reticulocyte plasma membranes. Although less than 5% of the receptor was labeled in vitro, the acylated protein could be readily observed after sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The acylated transferrin receptor in the reticulocyte membrane was specifically precipitated with a monoclonal antibody and was absent from mature red cell membranes. Incorporation of fatty acid was dependent on ATP, and fatty acid was 5-10 times less effective as an acyl donor than the acyl-CoA derivative, pointing out the strong potential of this reagent for in vitro acylation of membrane proteins. During in vitro maturation of reticulocytes, the receptor is released in vesicles into the incubation medium. Using reticulocytes labeled with [3H]tetradecanoate, it can be shown that the 3H-labeled receptor is transferred from the cells to the vesicles without loss of acyl groups, suggesting that the vesiculation process does not involve deacylation.  相似文献   

13.
Microsomal membrane preparations from rat lung catalyse the incorporation of radioactive linolenic acid from [14C]linolenoyl-CoA into position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. The incorporation was stimulated by bovine serum albumin and free CoA. Free fatty acids in the incubation mixtures were not utilised in the incorporation into complex lipids. Fatty acids were transferred to the acyl-CoA pool during the incorporation of linolenic acid into phosphatidylcholine. An increase in lysophosphatidylcholine occurred in incubations containing both bovine serum albumin and free CoA and in the absence of acyl-CoA. The results were consistent with an acyl-CoA: lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase operating in both a forwards and backwards direction and thus catalysing the acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. In incubations with mixed species of acyl-CoAs, palmitic acid was the major fatty acid substrate transferred to phosphatidylcholine in acyl exchange, whereas this acid was completely selected against in the acylation of added lysophosphatidylcholine. The selectivity for palmitoyl-CoA was particularly enhanced when the mixed acyl-CoA substrate was presented to the microsomes in molar concentrations equivalent to the molar ratios of the fatty acids in position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. During acyl exchange, the predominant fatty acid transferred to phosphatidylcholine from acyl-CoA was palmitic acid, whereas arachidonic acid was particularly selected for in the reverse reaction from phosphatidylcholine to acyl-CoA. A hypothesis is presented to explain the differential selectivity for acyl species between the forward and backward reactions of the acyltransferase that is based upon different affinities of the enzyme for substrates at high and low concentrations of acyl donor. Acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and phosphatidylcholine offers, therefore, a possible mechanism for the acyl-remodelling of phosphatidylcholine for the production of lung surfactant.  相似文献   

14.
Lysophosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate has been reported to form ion-conducting channels in artificial membranes. If formed in vivo, mechanisms for its removal from cellular membranes would be required. Thus, possible pathways were explored in rat brain and liver microsomes. Since neither lysophosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate nor lysophosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate were acylated in experiments with [3H]arachidonic acid or [14C]oleoyl CoA, polyphosphoinositides do not participate directly in a deacylation-reacylation cycle as proposed for the postsynthesis enrichment of phosphatidylinositol with arachidonic acid. Similar enrichment in polyphosphoinositides can occur only via the rapid phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle linking all three phosphoinositides. Lysophosphatidyl[2-3H]inositol 4,5-bisphosphate and lysophosphatidyl[2-3H]inositol 4-phosphate were rapidly dephosphorylated to 1-acyl-sn-glycero(3)phospho(1)-D-myo-inositol by microsomes from both tissues. Appearance of only trace quantities of radioactive lysophosphatidylinositol monophosphate during the catabolism of lysophosphatidyl[2-3H]inositol 4,5-bisphosphate indicated that the second dephosphorylation step, which was cation independent, was at least as fast as the first step which required Mg2+. In the presence of ATP, CoA, and arachidonic acid, the lysophosphatidylinositol was converted to phosphatidylinositol. This acylation reaction was rate limiting in brain microsomes. Dephosphorylation of lysophosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate was rate limiting in liver microsomes. Neither the lysopolyphosphoinositides nor the lysophosphatidylinositol produced from them in the reactions were degraded by acyl hydrolases or phosphodiesterases in microsomes from either tissue. Therefore, any lysopolyphosphoinositide formed in vivo would probably be removed by dephosphorylation and recycled to phosphatidylinositol.  相似文献   

15.
CoA-dependent transacylation activity in microsomes is known to catalyze the transfer of fatty acids between phospholipids and lysophospholipids in the presence of CoA without the generation of free fatty acids. We previously found a novel acyl-CoA synthetic pathway, ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthesis from phospholipids. We proposed that: 1) the ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthesis is due to the reverse reaction of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases and 2) the reverse and forward reactions of acyltransferases can combine to form a CoA-dependent transacylation system. To test these proposals, we examined whether or not recombinant mouse acyl-CoA:1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphate (lysophosphatidic acid, LPA) acyltransferase (LPAAT) could catalyze ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthetic activity and CoA-dependent transacylation activity. ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthesis was indeed found in the membrane fraction from Escherichia coli cells expressing mouse LPAAT, whereas negligible activity was observed in mock-transfected cells. Phosphatidic acid (PA), but not free fatty acids, served as an acyl donor for the reaction, and LPA was formed from PA in a CoA-dependent manner during acyl-CoA synthesis. These results indicate that the ATP-independent acyl-CoA synthesis was due to the reverse reaction of LPAAT. In addition, bacterial membranes containing LPAAT catalyzed CoA-dependent acylation of LPA; PA but not free fatty acid served as an acyl donor. These results indicate that the CoA-dependent transacylation of LPA consists of 1) acyl-CoA synthesis from PA through the reverse action of LPAAT and 2) the transfer of the fatty acyl moiety of the newly formed acyl-CoA to LPA through the forward reaction of LPAAT.  相似文献   

16.
A 20,000 X g particulate preparation isolated from maturing safflower seeds catalyzed the acylation of 1-acyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphate with acyl-CoA to form phosphatidate. The specific activity of the reaction exceeded 200 nmol min-1 mg protein-1. Although this preparation was also capable of catalyzing the acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate with acyl-CoA, the hydrolysis of phosphatidate, and the acylation of 1,2-diacylglycerol, phosphatidate was the only major product when the preparation was incubated with 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P and acyl-CoA. The enzyme responsible for this phosphatidate synthesis, 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase, showed a strict acyl-CoA specificity. The relative order of specificity for acyl-CoA was linoleoyl = oleoyl greater than palmitoleoyl greater than elaidoyl greater than cis-vaccenoyl greater than stearoyl = palmitoyl. This observation strongly suggests that the fatty acid composition of position 2 in phosphatidate synthesized in vivo primarily depends on both the acyl-CoA specificity of the 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase and the fatty acid composition of the acyl-CoA pool in the cell. Thus, the absence of saturated fatty acids at position 2 of safflower triacylglycerol may be explained in terms of the acyl-CoA specificity of the 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase. The fatty acid moiety esterified at position 1 of glycerol-3-P also affected the effectiveness of the reaction. The 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase utilized 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P molecular species in the following order of effectiveness: linoleoyl = oleoyl greater than palmitoyl. With a rise in incubation temperature, the initial rates of acylation with unsaturated acyl-CoA species increased more rapidly than those for saturated acyl-CoA species. A similar tendency was observed for saturated and unsaturated acyl acceptors. These data suggest that affinity of the acyltransferase for substrates may vary in response to changes in temperature, and that 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase may be involved in the alteration of the individual fatty acid compositions at positions 1 and 2 of glycerolipids in tissues grown at different temperatures. Based on these findings, further metabolism of 1-acyl-glycerol-3-P acyltransferase products could be the major factor determining the non-random distribution of fatty acids in safflower triacylglycerol.  相似文献   

17.
A23187 stimulated two enzymatic activities of human neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes), phospholipase A2 and fatty acyl-CoA acyltransferase, which resulted in a stimulated deacylation/reacylation cycle. The incorporation of fatty acids, other than arachidonic or eicosapentaenoic acid, into diacyl and alkylacyl species of choline phosphoglycerides was stimulated by 10-fold by A23187. These fatty acids were exclusively incorporated into the sn-2 position, and [3H]glycerol labeling showed there was no stimulation of de novo synthesis. A23187 also stimulated fatty acid incorporation into other phospholipids, but de novo synthesis accounted for a portion of this uptake. Inhibitors of protein kinase C prevented the stimulated recycling of phosphatidylcholine, and the simultaneous induction of platelet-activating factor synthesis, by inhibiting phospholipase A2 activation. They inhibited [3H]arachidonate release from prelabeled polymorphonuclear leukocytes, but had no effect on in vitro fatty acyl-CoA acyltransferase or acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase activity. Extracts from A23187-treated cells contained a fatty acyl-CoA acyltransferase, which did not utilize arachidonoyl-CoA, that was 2.3-fold more active than that of control extracts. Phosphatase treatment decreased this stimulated activity by 66%. Thus, A23187 stimulated a phospholipase A2 activity that generated both 1-alkyl and 1-acyl lysophosphatidylcholines. A stimulated acetyltransferase used a portion of the alkyl species for platelet-activating factor synthesis, while the acyl species and residual alkyl species were rapidly reacylated to phosphatidylcholine by a stimulated acyl-transferase. Arachidonate, an eicosanoid precursor, was spared by this process.  相似文献   

18.
Human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) incubated with 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (1-[3H]alkyl-2-acetyl-GPC; platelet activating factor) inactivated the compound by removing the acetyl group and replacing it with a long chain acyl residue. The nature of the acyl group added at the 2-position of the 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-acyl-GPC formed was examined by argentation chromatography and by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. A striking selectivity for arachidonate was observed in the acylation reaction. The major labeled component of the starting material was the 1-O-hexadecyl-linked species; high performance liquid chromatography analysis revealed that 75 to 80% of this component was acylated by arachidonate. Similarly, based on argentation thin layer chromatography, approximately 80% of the total starting material was acylated by tetraenoic acyl residues. The incorporation of 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-lyso-GPC into 1-O-alkyl-2-acyl-GPC by the PMN was compared; no difference in the acylation pattern was observed with the 2-acetyl and 2-lyso precursors. Thus, activation of the PMN does not appear to be required to elicit the selectivity for arachidonate. When labeled 1-palmitoyl-2-lyso-GPC was compared in the system under the same conditions, it was also preferentially acylated by arachidonate; thus, it is not clear at this time whether or not the selectivity for arachidonate is physiologically limited to platelet activating factor. Our findings suggest a close relationship exists between the metabolism of platelet activating factor and arachidonate in human PMN.  相似文献   

19.
1-O-[3H]Alkyl-2-lyso-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-lyso-GPC) incubated with human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) for 30 min is metabolized to 1-O-alkyl-2-acyl-GPC containing greater than 80% arachidonate at the 2 position (Chilton, F. H., O'Flaherty, J. T., Ellis, J. M., Swendsen, C. L., and Wykle, R. L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 7268-7271). PMN containing 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPC incorporated into their cellular phospholipids in this manner were stimulated with Ca2+ ionophore (A23187). Within 5 min after stimulation, 14%, 7%, and 7% of the total 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPC in the cells had been converted to 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-acetyl-GPC (platelet-activating factor), 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-lyso-GPC, and 3H-labeled neutral lipid, respectively. Stimulation by opsonized zymosan yielded similar results. In related studies, cells were labeled with 1-O-hexadecyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPC containing a [methyl-14C] choline moiety. The nature of the long-chain acyl residues in the sn-2 position of the labeled 1-O-hexadecyl-2-acyl-GPC remaining after stimulation with A23187 was examined. Analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography using synthetic 1-O-hexadecyl-2-acyl-GPC standards indicated there is a time-dependent loss of arachidonate from the 2 position of the labeled 1-O-hexadecyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPC followed by reacylation by other fatty acids (primarily linoleic and oleic). This shift in the acylation pattern exhibited after Ca2+ ionophore stimulation was further examined in PMN preincubated with A23187 and subsequently incubated with labeled 1-O-alkyl-2-lyso-GPC; the stimulated cells produced 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-acetyl-GPC (greater than 15% of total label) and 1-O-[3H]alkyl-2-acyl-GPC containing linoleic acid and oleic acid, rather than arachidonic acid in the sn-2 position. The findings demonstrate that upon stimulation of PMN, 1-O-alkyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPC can yield arachidonate and 1-O-alkyl-2-lyso-GPC; the 1-O-alkyl-2-lyso-GPC formed may be acetylated producing platelet-activating factor or reacylated with fatty acyl residues other than arachidonate.  相似文献   

20.
Macrophage microsomes catalyzed the transfer of arachidonic acid (20:4) from 1,2-diacyl-glycerophosphocholine (GPC) to 1-alkyl-GPC (lyso platelet-activating factor). This enzyme reaction did not require the presence of cofactors such as Co A. Free arachidonic acid or linoleic acid-labeled phospholipids failed to act as the acyl donor. These results suggest that the reaction is a CoA-independent direct transfer of arachidonic acid. This arachidonoyl transacylation system may play a very important role in the metabolism of lyso platelet-activating factor and also in the elimination or release of arachidonic acid from diacyl-GPC.  相似文献   

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