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L-acetylcarnitine, a substrate for chloroplast fatty acid synthesis
Authors:C MASTERSON  C WOOD  D R THOMAS
Institution:Department of Biology, The University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, U.K.
Abstract:Abstract. H14CO3 was not incorporated into fatty acids by isolated pea leaf chloroplasts, which, therefore, do not possess a self-contained pathway for the synthesis of fatty acids from early intermediates of the Calvin cycle. Citrate, pyruvate, acetate and L-acetylcarnitine were all shown to act as sources of acetyl groups for fatty acid synthesis by pea leaf chloroplasts. L-acetylcarnitine was the best substrate, being incorporated into fatty acids at rates that were at least five-fold higher than those achieved with the other substrates. Citrate was incorporated into fatty acids at the lowest rate, followed by pyruvate, with acetate being incorporated at the second highest rate of all. When the isolated chloroplasts were ruptured, an inhibition of L-acetylcarnitine incorporation into fatty acids was noted, whilst acetate incorporation remained unaffected. L-acetylcarnitine also increased the ratio of monoenoic: saturated fatty acids synthesized, compared with a 1:1 ratio observed when citrate, pyruvate and acetate were supplied as substrates. It is suggested that L-carnitine and carnitine acyltransferases play a central role in plant acyl CoA metabolism by facilitating the transfer of activated acyl groups across membranes (acyl CoA barriers).
Keywords:Pisum sativum L  : Leguminosae  pea  chloroplast fatty acid synthesis  L-acetylcarnitine
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