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1.
The solubility in water of saturated fatty acids with even carbon numbers from 8 to 18 was measured in the temperature range of 60 to 230°C and at a pressure of 5 or 15 MPa. The pressure had no significant effect on the solubility. The solubility of the fatty acids increased with increasing temperature. At temperatures higher than about 160°C, the logarithm of the solubility in mole fraction was linearly related to the reciprocal of the absolute temperature for each fatty acid, indicating that the water containing solubilized fatty acid molecules formed a regular solution at the higher temperatures. The enthalpy of a solution of the fatty acids in water, which was evaluated from the linear relationship at the given temperatures, increased linearly with the carbon number of the fatty acid.  相似文献   

2.
李宗军 《微生物学报》2005,45(3):426-430
通过对大肠杆菌生长温度、膜脂肪酸组成和压力抗性之间关系研究发现,10℃培养,对数期细胞有最大的压力抗性,随着培养温度的升高直到4 5℃,压力抗性呈下降的趋势;相反,10℃培养,稳定期的细胞对压力最敏感,随着培养温度的升高,压力抗性呈增加趋势,30~37℃时达到最大,之后到4 5℃有下降。对数期和稳定期细胞膜脂中不饱和脂肪酸的组成随温度的上升而下降,这与从全细胞中抽提的磷脂的熔点密切相关。因此,对数期细胞压力抗性随着膜流动性的增大而升高;但稳定期细胞,膜流动性与压力抗性之间不存在简单的对应变化关系  相似文献   

3.
1. Pseudomonas fluorescens was grown at various temperatures between 5 degrees C and 33 degrees C. The extractable lipids from organisms at various stages of growth and grown at different temperatures were examined. 2. The extractable lipids contained phosphatidylethanolamine, diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylcholine, and an ornithine-containing lipid. The relative amounts of these lipids did not vary significantly during growth or with the changes in growth temperature. 3. The major fatty acids were hexadecanoic, hexadecenoic and octadecenoic acids and the cyclopropane acids methylene-hexadecanoic and methylene-octadecanoic acids. The relative amount of unsaturated acids (including cyclopropane acids) did not change significantly during growth, but increased with decreasing temperature. 4. Phosphatidylethanolamines with different degrees of unsaturation and containing different amounts of cyclopropane acids were isolated from organisms grown at 5 degrees C and 22 degrees C and their surface and phase behaviour in water was investigated. Thermodynamic parameters for fusion and monolayer results for cyclopropane and other fatty acids were examined. 5. The surface pressure-area isotherms of phosphatidylethanolamines containing different amounts of unsaturated fatty acids show small differences but the individual isotherms remain essentially unchanged over the temperature range 5-22 degrees C. X-ray-diffraction methods show that the structures (lamellar+hexagonal) formed in water by phosphatidylethanolamine, isolated from organisms grown at 5 degrees C and 22 degrees C, are identical when compared at the respective growth temperatures. This points to a control mechanism of the physical state of the lipids that is sensitive to the operating temperature of the organism. 6. The molecular packing of cyclopropane acids is intermediate between that of the corresponding cis- and trans-monoenoic acids. However, substitution of a cyclopropane acid for a cis-unsaturated acid has insignificant effects on the molecular packing of phospholipids containing these acids.  相似文献   

4.
Hibernating mammals rely heavily on lipid metabolism to supply energy during hibernation. We wondered if the fatty acid binding protein from a hibernator responded to temperature differently than that from a nonhibernator. We found that the Kd for oleate of the liver fatty acid binding protein (1.5 microM) isolated from ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii) was temperature insensitive over 5-37 degrees C, while the rat liver fatty acid binding protein was affected with the Kd at 37 degrees C being about half (0.8 microM) that found at lower temperatures. This same trend was observed when comparing the specificity of various fatty acids of differing chain length and degree of unsaturation for the two proteins at 5 and 37 degrees C. At the lower temperature, ground squirrel protein bound long-chain unsaturated fatty acids, particularly linoleate and linolenate, at least as well as at the higher temperature and matched requirements for these fatty acids in the diet. The most common long-chain fatty acid, palmitate, was a more effective ligand for ground squirrel liver fatty acid binding protein at 5 degrees C than at 37 degrees C, with the opposite occurring in the eutherm. Rat protein was clearly not adapted to function optimally at temperatures lower than the animal's body temperature.  相似文献   

5.
Incorporation of tritium from tritiated water into lipid fractions was measured in isolated hepatocytes from rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) acclimated to 5 degrees C and 20 degrees C. Hepatocytes from cold-acclimated trout exhibited significantly higher rates of tritium incorporation into both fatty acid and sterol fractions at assay temperatures of 15 degrees C and 20 degrees C than did hepatocytes from warm-acclimated trout. Tritium incorporation into the fatty acid fraction was nearly temperature independent in hepatocytes from warm-acclimated trout (Q10 = 1.39) but markedly temperature dependent (Q10 = 2.63) in hepatocytes from cold-acclimated trout; in contrast, rates of sterol synthesis were more temperature dependent in warm-acclimated trout. At 5 degrees C, fatty acid lipogenesis comprised a significantly greater percentage of the total tritium incorporation in hepatocytes from warm-acclimated trout and the percentage of total lipogenesis attributable to fatty acids decreased significantly in warm-acclimated trout as the assay temperature increased; the opposite trends were observed in cold-acclimated trout.  相似文献   

6.
The relationship among growth temperature, membrane fatty acid composition, and pressure resistance was examined in Escherichia coli NCTC 8164. The pressure resistance of exponential-phase cells was maximal in cells grown at 10 degrees C and decreased with increasing growth temperatures up to 45 degrees C. By contrast, the pressure resistance of stationary-phase cells was lowest in cells grown at 10 degrees C and increased with increasing growth temperature, reaching a maximum at 30 to 37 degrees C before decreasing at 45 degrees C. The proportion of unsaturated fatty acids in the membrane lipids decreased with increasing growth temperature in both exponential- and stationary-phase cells and correlated closely with the melting point of the phospholipids extracted from whole cells examined by differential scanning calorimetry. Therefore, in exponential-phase cells, pressure resistance increased with greater membrane fluidity, whereas in stationary-phase cells, there was apparently no simple relationship between membrane fluidity and pressure resistance. When exponential-phase or stationary-phase cells were pressure treated at different temperatures, resistance in both cell types increased with increasing temperatures of pressurization (between 10 and 30 degrees C). Based on the above observations, we propose that membrane fluidity affects the pressure resistance of exponential- and stationary-phase cells in a similar way, but it is the dominant factor in exponential-phase cells whereas in stationary-phase cells, its effects are superimposed on a separate but larger effect of the physiological stationary-phase response that is itself temperature dependent.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of temperature on the uptake and metabolism of fluorescent labeled palmitic acid (FLC16) and phosphatidylcholine (FLPC) and lipase activities in the oyster protozoan parasite, Perkinsus marinus, meront stage were tested at 10, 18, and 28 degrees C. Temperature significantly affected not only the uptake, assimilation, and metabolism of both FLC16 and FLPC in P. marinus, but also its triacylglycerol (TAG) lipase activities. The incorporation of both FLC16 and FLPC increased with temperature and paralleled the increase in the amount of total fatty acids in P. marinus meront cultures. The incorporation of FLC16 was higher than FLPC at all temperatures. The percentage of FLC16 metabolized to TAG was significantly higher at higher temperatures. Trace amounts of incorporated FLC16 were detected in monoacylglycerol (MAG) and PC at 18 and 28 degrees C. P. marinus meronts metabolized FLPC to TAG, diacylglycerol (DAG), monoacylglycerol (MAG), free fatty acids (FFA), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and cardiolipin (CL). The conversion of FLPC to TAG and PE was highest at 28 degrees C. The relative proportions of individual fatty acids and total saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids changed with temperatures. While total saturated fatty acids (SAFAs) increased with temperature, total monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs) decreased with temperature. Total polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) increased from 28 to 18 degrees C. The findings of increase of total SAFAs and decrease of total MUFAs with the increase of temperatures and upward shift of total PUFAs from 28 to 18 degrees C suggest that, as in other organisms, P. marinus is capable of adapting to changes in environmental temperatures by modifying its lipid metabolism. Generally, higher lipase activities were noted at higher cultivation temperatures. Both TAG lipase and phospholipase activities were detected in P. marinus cells and their extra cellular products (ECP), but phospholipase activities in both the cell pellets and ECP were very low. Also, lipase activities were much lower in ECP than in the cells. The observations of low metabolism, bioconversion of incorporated fluorescent lipid analogs and lipase activities at low temperatures are consistent with the low in vitro growth rate and low infectivity of P. marinus at low temperatures.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of growth temperature on the cellular fatty acid profiles of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium was studied over a temperature range from 40 to 10 degrees C. As the growth temperature of B. subtilis was reduced, the lower-melting point anteiso-acids increased, while the higher-melting point iso-acids decreased. Consequently the ratio of branched- to straight-chain acids was unaffected by temperature, although changes in the position of fatty acid branching and the degree of unsaturated branched-chain fatty acids occurred. In B. megaterium a more complicated, biphasic behaviour was observed. Saturated, straight-chain and iso-branched acids decreased only from 40 degrees C down to 20-26 degrees C, and anteiso-acids decreased only from 20-26 degrees C to 10 degrees C, while unsaturated acids increased over the whole temperature range studied. Thus, in B. megaterium total branched-chain acids decreased and straight-chain acids increased as temperature decreased. However, the overall cellular content of lower-melting point fatty acids increased with decreasing temperature in both bacilli, and unsaturated fatty acids appeared to be essential components in the adaptation of the microbes to changes in temperatures. Since changes in the relative amounts of branched- and straight-chain fatty acid biosynthesis are known to reflect differences in fatty acid primers, temperature seems to affect not only the activity of the fatty acid desaturases but also the formation or availability of these primers. The results indicate, however, that notable species-specific regulatory features exist in this genus of bacteria.  相似文献   

9.
Non-esterified long-chain fatty acids reduce the extent of hypotonic hemolysis at a certain low concentration range but cause hemolysis at higher concentrations. This biphasic behavior was investigated at different temperatures (0-37 degrees C) for lauric (12:0), myristic (14:0), palmitoleic (16:1), oleic (cis-18:1) and elaidic (trans-18:1) acids. The results are summarized as follows: (A) the fatty acids examined exhibit a high degree of specificity in their thermotropic behavior; (B) oleic acid protects against hypotonic hemolysis even at the highest concentrations, up to 15 degrees C, when it becomes hemolytic, but only in a limited concentration range; (C) elaidic acid does not affect the osmotic stability of erythrocytes up to 20 degrees C, when it starts protecting: above 30 degrees C, it becomes hemolytic at the highest concentrations; (D) palmitoleic acid is an excellent protecting agent at all temperatures in a certain concentration range, becoming hemolytic at higher concentrations; (E) lauric acid protects up to 30 degrees C and becomes hemolytic only above this temperature; (F) myristic acid exhibits an extremely unusual behavior at 30 and 37 degrees C by having alternating concentration ranges of protecting and hemolytic effects; (G) there is a common critical temperature for hemolysis at 30 degrees C for saturated and trans-unsaturated fatty acids; (H) the initial slope of Arrhenius plots of percent hemolysis at the concentration of maximum protection is negative for cis-unsaturated fatty acids and positive for saturated and trans-unsaturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

10.
Cellular fatty acid compositions of five psychrotolerant groundwater isolates representing alpha- and beta-Proteobacteria were studied at temperatures ranging from 8 to 25 degrees C. Unsaturation of straight-chain fatty acids was the most common response to decreasing temperature and was detected in four of the isolates. On solid media, decrease of temperature resulted in a decrease of cyclopropane fatty acids in beta-proteobacterial isolates. The formation of cyclopropane fatty acids depended, however, to a greater extent on the growth phase than the temperature and increased drastically as the cells entered stationary phase. The alpha-proteobacterial isolates contained a branched C(19:1) fatty acid. The formation of the branched C(19:1) increased during growth in the same way as the cyclopropane fatty acids in beta-proteobacterial strains, indicating possibly an analogous formation of the branched fatty acid by methylation of the 18:1 fatty acid. Sphingomonas sp. K6 possessed a novel temperature-induced modification of lipid fatty acids. As temperature decreased from 25 to 8 degrees C, the fatty acid composition shifted from predominantly even-carbon fatty acids to odd-carbon fatty acids. The results show completely different fatty acid modifications in two strains of the same genus Sphingomonas.  相似文献   

11.
The interchange of octadecenoic acids and dihydrosterulic acid was a response of aerobically growing Lactobacillus fermentum to changes in growth temperature. Oleic and vaccenic acid contents decreased both at temperatures below 20 degrees C and above 26 degrees C, showing mirror image behaviour, with a concomitant increase in dihydrosterulic acid. A temperature-dependent shift from vaccenic to oleic acid synthesis, and the conversion of the latter to dihydrosterulic acid was responsible for the overall change. Consequently, the degree of fatty acid unsaturation decreased at temperatures above 26 degrees C, whereas the degree of cyclization increased. The converse occurred below 20 degrees C. The relative amount of lactobacillic acid, total cellular fatty acid content, and mean fatty acid chain length were practically temperature-independent. The occurrence of oleic acid is thought to be related to aerobic growth conditions.  相似文献   

12.
The fatty acid composition of the lipid A moiety of the lipopolysaccharide and phospholipid fractions of Proteus mirabilis changed significantly on varying the growth temperature. A decrease in the growth temperature from 43 degrees C to 15 degrees C resulted in a decrease in the palmitic acid content of the lipopolysaccharide from 19.4% of total fatty acids at 43 degrees C to 1.4% at 15 degrees C, and by the appearance of an unsaturated fatty acid residue, hexadecenoic acid. Changes in the 3-hydroxy-myristic acid content of the lipid A were minimal. The decrease in the growth temperature also resulted in a decrease in the saturated fatty acid content of the phospholipid fraction, which was accompanied by an increase in their fluidity, as measured by the freedom of motion of spin-labeled fatty acids incorporated into dispersions made of the phospholipids. Nevertheless, the fluidity obtained with membrane phospholipids extracted from the cells grown at various temperatures were essentially the same when fluidity was determined at the growth temperature, supporting the hypothesis that variations in the fatty acid composition of membrane phospholipids serve to produce membranes having a constant fluidity at different temperatures of growth.  相似文献   

13.
Cheng H  Zhu X  Zhu C  Qian J  Zhu N  Zhao L  Chen J 《Bioresource technology》2008,99(9):3337-3341
Hydrolysis of biomass waste (such as fish waste, chicken waste, hair and feather) to produce amino acids was studied in sub-critical water, with reaction temperatures from 180 to 320 degrees C and reaction pressures from 3 to 30 MPa. The product of amino acid was determined by Amino Acid Analyzer (BioLC), and 18 kinds of amino acid were obtained. The results show that the controlling of reaction atmosphere, pressure, temperature and time of hydrolysis is very important to obtain high yield of amino acid; most of amino acids reached maximum yield at reaction temperature range of 200-290 degrees C and reaction time range of 5-20 min. There are obvious changes of amino acids yield at reaction pressures of 6-16 MPa and reaction temperature around 260 degrees C, owing to the homogeneousness of the first two phases of water in the formation of vapor and liquid. There are different yields of the same amino acid in different reaction atmospheres (e.g. air, carbon dioxide and nitrogen).  相似文献   

14.
This is the first report on the effects of a single bout of swimming to exhaustion in cold water on rat erythrocyte deformability, aggregation and fatty acid composition in erythrocyte membranes. The results indicate that there was a significant decrease in body temperature of experimental rats swimming in water at 4 degrees C and 25 degrees C when compared to the control. Erythrocyte aggregation indices did not change after swimming in water at 4 degrees C whereas erythrocyte deformability increased at shear stress 1,13 [Pa] and 15,96 [Pa]. Physical effort performed in water at 4 degrees C when compared to the control group resulted in an increase in monounsaturated and polyunsaturated n-3 fatty acid content in erythrocyte membranes that influenced the increase in their fluidity and permeability even though that of polyunsaturated n-6 fatty acids decreased. Physical effort performed in 25 degrees C water resulted in an increase in saturated fatty acid content and a decrease in all polyunsaturated fatty acids and polyunsaturated n-6 fatty acids when compared to the control group. Swimming of untrained old rats in cold water affected rheological properties oferythrocytes in a negligible way while changes in the fatty acid composition of erythrocyte membranes were more pronounced.  相似文献   

15.
Growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 at 15 to 45 degrees C in tryptic soy broth resulted in changes in the lipids, lipopolysaccharides (LPSs), and outer membrane proteins of the cells. Cells grown at 15 degrees C contained, relative to those cultivated at 45 degrees C, increased levels of the phospholipid fatty acids hexadecenoate and octadecenoate and reduced levels of the corresponding saturated fatty acids. Furthermore, the lipid A fatty acids also showed thermoadaptation with decreases in dodecanoic and hexadecanoic acids and increases in the level of 3-hydroxydecanoate and 2-hydroxdodecanoate as the growth temperature decreased. In addition, LPS extracted from cells cultivated at the lower temperatures contained a higher content of long-chain S-form molecules than that isolated from cells grown at higher temperatures. On the other hand, the percentage of LPS cores substituted with side-chain material decreased from 37.6 mol% at 45 degrees C to 19.3 mol% at 15 degrees C. The outer membrane protein profiles indicated that at low growth temperatures there was an increase in a polypeptide with an apparent molecular weight of 43,000 and decreases in the content of 21,000 (protein H1)- and 27,500-molecular-weight proteins.  相似文献   

16.
The following study was carried out with the aim of widening our understanding of the thermoadaptive mechanisms of the membrane of thermophiles, using Bacillus stearothermophilus var. nondiastaticus as test-organism. The phospholipids and their acyl chain composition of this Bacillus studied in relation to the physical properties of its membrane from bacteria grown at various temperatures. Phospholipids account for 68-75 weight% of the total lipid in cells grown at 45, 55 or 65 degrees C. Phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol constitute up to 90% of the total phospholipids; no amino phospholipids were found. Increasing the growth temperatures from 45 degrees to 65 degrees C caused an approximately 4-fold decrease in the proportion of the branched-chain fatty acids and a 2-fold increase in the amount of the saturated acyl chains. The reduced proportion of the branched fatty acids was mainly due to a decrease in their anteiso forms. Unsaturated fatty acids were not produced by cells grown at 65 degrees C. In accordance with the fatty acid composition, the molecular packing of phospholipids in monolayers was more expanded with phospholipids from 45 degrees C grown cells as compared with cultures grown at 55 degrees C. The thermotropic gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of the membrane lipids was monitored by differential scanning calorimetry and fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. With increase of the growth temperature the phase transition was progressively shifted to higher but narrower range of temperatures. Completion of the lipid melting occurred always at temperatures below those employed for growth. A constructed phase diagram enabled to relate the growth temperature, the fatty acid composition and the lipid apparent microviscosity at temperatures not used in the present study for growth of the thermophile. The minimum temperature for growth and the upper boundary temperature of the least saturated lipid crystallization were extrapolated in this manner; they correspond to the experimentally determined minimal growth temperature. The apparent microviscosity, a measure of membrane order, decreased gradually and conspicuously as the growth temperature was elevated. The delimiting apparent microviscosity values, at the maximal (65 degrees C) and minimal (41 degrees C) growth temperatures were 0.8 and 1.8 poise, respectively. This lack of rigorous homeostatic control of the bulk lipid viscosity prompted reevaluation of the physiological significance of 'homeoviscous adaptation' in Bacillus stearothermophilus.  相似文献   

17.
Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen capable of growth at refrigeration temperatures. Membrane lipid fatty acids are major determinants of a sufficiently fluid membrane state to allow growth at low temperatures. L. monocytogenes was characterized by a fatty acid profile dominated to an unusual extent (> 95%) by branched-chain fatty acids, with the major fatty acids being anteiso-C15:0, anteiso-C17:0, and iso-C15:0 in cultures grown in complex or defined media at 37 degrees C. Determination of the fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes 10403S and SLCC 53 grown over the temperature range 45 to 5 degrees C revealed two modes of adaptation of fatty acid composition to lower growth temperatures: (i) shortening of fatty acid chain length and (ii) alteration of branching from iso to anteiso. Two transposon Tn917-induced cold-sensitive mutants incapable of growth at low temperatures had dramatically altered fatty acid compositions with low levels of i-C15:0, a-C15:0, and a-C17:0 and high levels of i-C14:0, C14:0, i-C16:0, and C16:0. The levels of a-C15:0 and a-C17:0 and the ability to grow at low temperatures were restored by supplementing media with 2-methylbutyric acid, presumably because it acted as a precursor of methylbutyryl coenzyme A, the primer for synthesis of anteiso odd-numbered fatty acids. When mid-exponential-phase 10403S cells grown at 37 degrees C were temperature down-shocked to 5 degrees C they were able, for the most part, to reinitiate growth before the membrane fatty acid composition had reset to a composition more typical for low-temperature growth. No obvious evidence was found for a role for fatty acid unsaturation in adaptation of L. monocytogenes to cold temperature. The switch to a fatty acid profile dominated by a-C15:0 at low temperatures and the association of cold sensitivity with deficiency of a-C15:0 focus attention on the critical role of this fatty acid in growth of L. monocytogenes in the cold, presumably through its physical properties and their effects, in maintaining a fluid, liquid-crystalline state of the membrane lipids.  相似文献   

18.
The specific aims of this research were to evaluate the combined effects of ethanol and high-pressure homogenization at different temperatures on cell viability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and to study the induced modification of fatty acid composition. The decrease in viability was weak at 10 degrees C while a homogenization pressure over 1000 bar (1 bar = 100 kPa) induced a significant reduction in viability when the cells were incubated at 20 and 30 degrees C. The cell tolerance to pressure decreased with an increase in ethanol concentration and temperature. Ethanol, particularly intracellular ethanol accumulated by S. cerevisiae, played an important role in the response to homogenization pressure and in modification of the cell fatty acid composition. In fact, an unusually elevated accumulation of ethyl esters in lipid extracts of yeast cells subjected to high homogenization pressure, especially in the presence of exogenous ethanol and at 30 degrees C, was observed. Moreover, only unsaturated and traces of short chain fatty acids were esterified with ethanol.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli K12 cells grown at higher temperatures and then subjected to lower temperatures produce fatty acids with higher unsaturated/saturated ratios than cells completely adapted to the lower temperatures (Okuyama et al. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 4812-4817). This hyper-response was not an artefact of chloramphenicol treatment and was observed when the shift-down was more than 20 degrees C in the cells grown at either 40 degrees C or 35 degrees C. In contrast, cells grown at either 25 degrees C or 30 degrees C showed no appreciable hyper-response in terms of unsaturated/saturated ratio on temperature shifts to as low as 10 degrees C. By combining shift-down and shift-up experiments, we could show the presence of different types of temperature dependency in the fatty acid-synthesizing systems of cells grown at various temperatures. Contrary to wild-type cells which synthesized mainly cis-vaccenate on down-shift to 10 degrees C, a mutant strain lacking beta-ketoacyl acyl-carrier protein synthase II synthesized more palmitoleate (16:1) and less palmitate at 10 degrees C than at 40 degrees C. The average chain lengths of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids also changed, but differently, between the mutant and wild-type cells on shifts of temperature. Thus, the mutant strain has a temperature-dependent fatty acid-synthesizing system qualitatively different from that seen in a wild-type strain.  相似文献   

20.
Metabolic rates, VO2, were studied in four muskrats (Ondatra zibethicus) swimming in a water channel at velocities of 0.2 to 0.75 m/s in water at temperatures of 25 and 30 degrees C. At both water temperatures, VO2 increased linearly with increasing swimming velocity. The VO2 was higher for muskrats swimming in water at 25 than 30 degrees C. The metabolic performance of swimming appears to be influenced by the interaction of swimming velocity and water temperature.  相似文献   

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