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1.
The effect of vasopressin on the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholines and phosphatidylethanolamines was investigated in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes in suspension. Treatment of hepatocytes with vasopressin inhibits the incorporation of [Me-14C]choline into phosphatidylcholines in a dose-dependent manner. The hormone does not affect the uptake, phosphorylation or oxidation of choline. Pulse-chase studies indicate that CTP:cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase might be subject to hormonal regulation by vasopressin. In contrast with the inhibitory effect of vasopressin on the synthesis of phosphatidylcholines, this hormone stimulates the incorporation of [1,2-14C]ethanolamine into phosphatidylethanolamines in a dose-dependent manner. Pulse and pulse-chase studies with labelled ethanolamine show that the conversion of ethanolaminephosphate to CDPethanolamine as well as the formation of phosphatidylethanolamines from CDPethanolamine and diacylglycerol are enhanced. Determination of the effect of vasopressin on the activity of the enzymes of the synthesis de novo of phosphatidylethanolamines demonstrates an increase of the activity of ethanolaminephosphotransferase, probably as a result of the increased amount of diacylglycerol in vasopressin-treated cells.  相似文献   

2.
Glycinebetaine synthesis from [methyl-14C]choline and [1,2-14C]ethanolamine in leaf disks of Avicennia marina, was increased by salt stress (250 and 500 mM NaCl). After 18 h incubation with [methyl-14C]choline, phosphocholine and CO(2) were found to be heavily labelled. Phosphocholine contained 39% of the total radioactivity taken up by non-salinised (control) leaf disks and 15% of the total for salinised leaf disks stressed with 500 mM NaCl. Eighteen and 49% of the radioactivity absorbed by control and salinised disks, respectively, were released as CO(2). Metabolic studies of [1,2-14C]ethanolamine revealed that the radioactivity taken up by the leaf disks was recovered as the following compounds after 18 h: phosphorylated compounds (mainly phosphoethanolamine, phosphodimethylethanolamine and phosphocholine) (40-50%); choline (1-2%); glycinebetaine (3-5%); lipids (20-28%); CO(2) (6-10%). Unlike glycinebetaine, incorporation into phosphorylated compounds and lipids were reduced by salt stress. Incorporation of [methyl-14C]S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) into choline, phosphocholine and glycinebetaine in leaf disks was stimulated by salt stress. In vitro activities of adenosine kinase and adenosine nucleosidase, which are implicated in stimulating the SAM regeneration cycle, increased after the leaf disks were incubated with 250 and 500 mM NaCl for 18 h. Changes in metabolism involving choline and glycinebetaine due to salt stress are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The uptake and metabolism of [methyl-14C]choline in the organotypic culture of newborn mouse cerebellum was examined. Explants of 8 day in vitro (8 DIV) were incubated for 48 h under standard conditions with 21.0 microM [14C]choline at 35 degrees C. During the first hour of incubation, most of the [14C]choline incorporated was transferred to phosphocholine. The amount of [14C]phosphocholine increased gradually at the initial rate of 0.95 +/- 0.17 nmol/mg protein/h and saturated after 7 h (4.31 +/- 1.30 nmol/mg protein). The synthesis of [14C]phospholipids was observed after a distinct time lag. About 96% of the radioactivity in the lipids was incorporated into phosphatidylcholine. The amount of phosphatidylcholine increased linearly up to 48 h of incubation: 11.9 +/- 2.10 nmol/mg protein at 24 h and 21.9 +/- 2.43 nmol/mg protein at 48 h. From double-label studies it was found that phosphocholine was a precursor of phosphatidylcholine. The content of [14C]choline within explants remained nearly constant through the incubation period. Acetylcholine synthesis in mouse cerebellum culture was relatively low, and the content remained constant through the incubation period (0.006 +/- 0.003 nmol/mg protein). Activities of acetylcholine synthesis of cerebral and cerebellar homogenates were compared. Phosphatidylcholine synthesized in mouse cerebellum culture separated into two spots on thin layer chromatograph using silica gel G plates. Gas chromatographs suggested that the separation depends on the difference in fatty acid composition.  相似文献   

4.
Sphingomyelin synthesis was studied in slices of rat heart by using [Me-14C]choline, [1,2-14C]ethanolamine, S-adenosyl-L-[14C]methionine and [32P]Pi as as precursors. In the presence of both [Me-14C]choline and [32P]Pi the ratio of the specific radioactivities of 14C and 32P in phosphatidylcholine was greater than in sphingomyelin at all the times studied. This suggested that synthesis of phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin de novo did not involve the utilization of a common pool of cytidine diphosphate choline. In addition, studies with [1,2-14C]ethanolamine and S-adenosyl-L-[14C]methionine indicated that a quantitatively significant pool of choline, derived from these precursors, was selectively utilized for sphingomyelin formation. This pool was not represented by phosphatidylcholine formed by methylation of phosphatidylethanolamine or by other pathways.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of an analogue of cAMP on the uptake and metabolism of choline in the heart was studied in isolated cardiac cells. The cells were obtained from 7-day-old chick embryos and maintained in culture. The effects of cAMP were studied using the dibutyryl cAMP analogue and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. After a 2-h incubation with [3H]choline, about 85% of the label was recovered in phosphocholine, with most of the rest in phospholipid. During a subsequent chase incubation, [3H]phosphocholine was transferred to phosphatidylcholine with little accumulation in CDP-choline. This suggests the rate-limiting step for the conversion of phosphocholine to phosphatidylcholine in these cells is the synthesis of CDP-choline. cAMP decreased the incorporation of choline into phosphatidylcholine, but did not change the flux of metabolites through the step catalyzed by CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase. cAMP had little effect on choline uptake at low (1-25 microM) extracellular choline concentrations, but significantly (p less than 0.05) decreased choline uptake at higher (37.5-50 microM) extracellular choline concentrations. Thus, cardiac cells take up and metabolize choline to phosphocholine, with CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase being the rate-limiting step in phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. cAMP decreases [3H]choline uptake and its subsequent incorporation into phosphocholine and phospholipid. However, the metabolism of choline within the cell is unaffected.  相似文献   

6.
Differences between the influences of phorbol esters (such as 4 beta-12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate) and of fatty acids (such as oleic acid) on the synthesis and turnover of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) and other phospholipids have been studied in glioma (C6), neuroblastoma (N1E-115), and hybrid (NG108-15) cells in culture using [methyl-3H]choline, [32P]Pi, [1,2-14C]ethanolamine, or 1-14C-labeled fatty acids as lipid precursors. 100-500 microM oleic acid stimulated PtdCho synthesis 3- to 5-fold in all three cell lines, but had little influence on chase of choline label following a 24-h pulse. Phorbol ester (50-200 nM) stimulated PtdCho synthesis 1.5- to 3-fold in C6 cells, was without effect in N1E-115 cells, and had intermediate effects on NG108-15 cells. Phorbol ester stimulated both uptake of extracellular choline and synthesis of PtdCho, whereas fatty acid stimulated only synthesis. Release of radioactivity from 24-h pulse-labeled PtdCho to the medium was enhanced by phorbol ester in C6 cells. Incorporation of [32P]Pi, primarily into PtdCho, was stimulated, whereas utilization of [1,2-14C]ethanolamine or 1-14C-fatty acid was little altered by phorbol ester. C6 cells "down-regulated" with phorbol ester lost the stimulatory response of subsequent treatment with phorbol esters on PtdCho synthesis, but the response to fatty acid was enhanced. Fatty acid had little influence on the relative binding of phorbol ester or "translocation" of phorbol ester binding sites. Accordingly, metabolism of phospholipids in these cultured cells of neural origin is markedly influenced by cell type, phospholipid class, condition of incubation medium, and nature of stimulator. Phorbol esters and fatty acids appear to enhance phospholipid synthesis and turnover by distinct intracellular mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
Mudd SH  Datko AH 《Plant physiology》1989,90(1):296-305
The results of experiments in which intact plants of Lemna paucicostata were labeled with either l-[(3)H(3)C]methionine, l-[(14)CH(3)]methionine, or [1,2-(14)C]ethanolamine support the conclusion that growth in concentrations of choline of 3.0 micromolar or above brings about marked decreases in the rate of biosynthesis of methylated forms of ethanolamine (normally present chiefly as phosphatidylcholine, with lesser amounts of choline and phosphocholine). The in vivo locus of the block is at the committing step in the biosynthetic sequence at which phosphoethanolamine is methylated by S-adenosylmethionine to form phosphomethylethanolamine. The block is highly specific: flow of methyl groups originating in methionine continues into S-adenosylmethionine, S-methylmethionine, the methyl moieties of pectin methyl ester, and other methylated metabolites. When choline uptake is less than the total that would be synthesized by control plants, phosphoethanolamine methylation is down-regulated to balance the uptake; total plant content of choline and its derivatives remains essentially constant. At maximum down-regulation, phosphoethanolamine methylation continues at 5 to 10% of normal. A specific decrease in the total available activity of AdoMet: phosphoethanolamine N-methyltransferase, as well as feedback inhibition of this enzyme by phosphocholine, and prevention of accumulation of phosphoethanolamine by down-regulation of ethanolamine synthesis may each contribute to effective control of phosphoethanolamine methylation. This down-regulation may necessitate major changes in S-adenosylmethionine metabolism. Such changes are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Previous studies suggest that the steps of the CDP- choline pathway of phosphatidylcholine synthesis are tightly linked in a so-called metabolon. Evidence has been presented that only choline that enters cells through the choline transporter, and not phosphocholine administered to cells by membrane permeabilization, is incorporated into phosphatidylcholine. Here, we show that [(14)C]phosphocholine derived from the lysosomal degradation of [(14)C]choline-labeled sphingomyelin is incorporated as such into phosphatidylcholine in human and mouse fibroblasts. Low density lipoprotein receptor-mediated endocytosis was used to specifically direct [(14)C]sphingomyelin to the lysosomal degradation pathway. Free labeled choline was not found either intracellularly or in the medium, not even when the cells were energy-depleted. Deficiency of lysosomal acid phosphatases in mouse or alkaline phosphatase in human fibroblasts did not affect the incorporation of lysosomal [(14)C]sphingomyelin-derived [(14)C]phosphocholine into phosphatidylcholine, supporting our finding that phosphocholine is not degraded to choline prior to its incorporation into phosphatidylcholine. Inhibition studies and analysis of molecular species showed that exogenous [(3)H]choline and sphingomyelin-derived [(14)C]phosphocholine are incorporated into phosphatidylcholine via a common pathway of synthesis. Our findings provide evidence that, in fibroblasts, phosphocholine derived from sphingomyelin is transported out of the lysosome and subsequently incorporated into phosphatidylcholine without prior hydrolysis of phosphocholine to choline. The findings do not support the existence of a phosphatidylcholine synthesis metabolon in fibroblasts.  相似文献   

9.
Choline Synthesis in Spinach in Relation to Salt Stress   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Choline metabolism was examined in spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) plants growing under nonsaline and saline conditions. In spinach, choline is required for phosphatidylcholine synthesis and as a precursor for the compatible osmolyte glycine betaine (betaine). When control (nonsalinized) leaf discs were incubated for up to 2 h with [1,2-14C]ethanolamine, label appeared in the N-methylated derivatives of phosphoethanolamine including phosphomono-, phosphodi-, and phosphotri- (i.e. phosphocholine) methyl-ethanolamine, as well as in choline and betaine, whereas no radioactivity could be detected in the mono- and dimethylated derivatives of the free base ethanolamine. Leaf discs from salinized plants showed the same pattern of labeling, although the proportion of label that accumulated in betaine was almost 3-fold higher in the salinized leaf discs. Enzymes involved in choline metabolism were assayed in crude leaf extracts of plants. The activites of ethanolamine kinase and of the three S-adenosylmethionine:phospho-base N-methyltransferase enzymes responsible for N-methylating phosphoethanolamine to phosphocholine were all higher in extracts of plants salinized step-wise to 100, 200, or 300 mM NaCI compared with controls. In contrast, choline kinase, phosphocholine phosphatase, and cytidine 5[prime]-triphosphate: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activities showed little variation with salt stress. Thus, the increased diversion of choline to betaine in salt-stressed spinach appears to be mediated by the increased activity of several key enzymes involved in choline biosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
When type II pneumonocytes from adult rats were maintained in a medium that lacked choline, the incorporation of [14C]glycerol into phosphatidylcholine was not greatly diminished during the period that the cells displayed characteristics of type II pneumonocytes. Cells that were maintained in choline-free medium that contained choline oxidase and catalase, however, became depleted of choline and subsequent synthesis of phosphatidylcholine by these cells was responsive to choline in the extracellular medium. Incorporation of [14C]glycerol into phosphatidylcholine by choline-depleted cells was stimulated maximally (approx. 6-fold) by extracellular choline at a concentration (0.05 mM) that also supported the greatest incorporation into phosphatidylglycerol. The incorporation of [14C]glycerol into other glycerophospholipids by choline-depleted cells was not increased by extracellular choline. When cells were incubated in the presence of [3H]cytidine, the choline-dependent stimulation of the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol was accompanied by an increased recovery of [3H]CMP. This increased recovery of [3H]CMP reflected an increase in the intracellular amount of CMP from 48 +/- 9 to 76 +/- 16 pmol/10(6) cells. Choline-depleted cells that were exposed to [3H]choline contained [3H]CDP-choline as the principal water-soluble choline derivative. As the extracellular concentration of choline was increase, however, the amount of 3H in phosphocholine greatly exceeded that in all other water-soluble derivatives. Choline-depletion of cells resulted in an increase in the specific activity of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase in cell homogenates (from 0.40 +/- 0.15 to 1.31 +/- 0.20 nmol X min-1 X mg of protein-1). These data are indicative that the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine is integrated with that of phosphatidylglycerol and are consistent with the proposed involvement of CMP in this integration. The choline-depleted type II pneumonocyte provides a new model for investigating the regulation of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Biosynthesis of sphingomyelin from ceramides was investigated in lung subcellular fractions by incubating a lyophilized mixture of albumin and subcellular fraction (0.1-0.2 mg of protein) coated with [acyl-14C]-ceramide and phosphatidyl[methyl-3H]choline in Tris-buffer. The lamellar-body-rich fraction exhibited the highest specific activity for sphingomyelin biosynthesis measured by 14C incorporation into sphingomyelins or by [3H]phosphocholine transfer from phosphatidylcholines. Plasma membranes formed the next most active fraction, followed by the 'smooth' and, then, the 'rough' endoplasmic reticulum. Sphingomyelin biosynthesis by lamellar bodies was optimum at pH 7.4 and was inhibited by sphingomyelins formed. Slight inhibitory effects were also observed with Mn2+, Ca2+ and lysophosphatidylcholine. Phosphocholine transfer from CDPcholine was not observed under the reaction conditions employed. Ceramide conversion and phosphocholine transfer increased with ceramide concentration to reach a maximum at about 0.06 mM. The highest conversion rate was observed when 18:1 ceramide was used as an acceptor. When 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine was the phosphocholine donor, the overall biosynthesis of sphingomyelin was much higher than when using dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. These results suggest the possible involvement of the studied reaction in the control of the degree of saturation of the surfactant phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

12.
The methylation steps in the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine by castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) endosperm have been studied by pulse-chase labeling. Endosperm halves were incubated with [methyl-(14)C]S-adenosyl-l-methionine, [2-(14)C]ethanolamine, [(14)C]ethanolamine phosphate, or [(14)C]serine phosphate. The kinetics of appearance were followed in the free, phospho-, and phosphatidyl-bases. The initial methylation utilized ethanolamine as a substrate to form methylethanolamine, which was then converted to dimethylethanolamine, choline, and phosphomethylethanolamine. Subsequent methylations occurred at the phospho-base and, to a lesser extent, the phosphatidyl-base levels, after which the radioactivity either remained constant or decreased in these compounds and accumulated in phosphatidylcholine. Although the precursors tested did support the synthesis of choline, the kinetics of the labeling make them unlikely to be the major sources of free choline to be utilized for the nucleotide pathway. A model with two pools of choline is proposed, and the implications of these results for the pathways leading to phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Exposure of fetal type II pneumocytes to phospholipase A2 inhibitors led to significantly reduced choline uptake and decreased synthesis of total and disaturated phosphatidylcholines from both [methyl-14C]choline and [9,10(n)-3H]palmitate precursors. The percentage of the total synthesized phosphatidylcholine recovered as disaturated phosphatidylcholine was increased when compared to that in control cultures, suggesting that unsaturated phosphatidylcholine synthesis was reduced to a greater extent than that of the disaturated species. Synthesis of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylethanolamine from labeled palmitate was also reduced, whereas that of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylglycerol was significantly increased. Addition of phospholipase C resulted in increased synthesis of phosphatidylcholine from both labeled precursors; no significant changes were found in synthesis of most of the other 3H-labeled lipids. Added phospholipase A2 did not lead to any changes in either choline or palmitate incorporation. However, when melittin (a phospholipase A2 activator) was added to the cultures, greater incorporation of both palmitate and choline was observed, along with a significant increase in the percentage of total cellular radioactivity in 14C-labeled lipids, indicating also stimulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis. A marked increase in CTP: phosphorylcholine cytidylyltransferase activity was found after treatment of the cultures with phospholipase C. Exposure to quinacrine also increased the activity of this enzyme. Addition of phospholipase C and melittin to prelabeled pneumocyte cultures accelerated degradation of cell phospholipids and the release of free fatty acids as the main degradation products. These findings suggest that intracellular phospholipases are regulators of synthesis of surfactant phospholipids in fetal type II pneumocytes, and that activation or inhibition of these phospholipases could represent a mechanism through which hormones and pharmacological agents modify surfactant and other phospholipid synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
The Ca2+ dependent incorporation of [14C]ethanolamine, L-[14C]serine and [14C]choline into phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine, respectively, were investigated in membrane preparations from rat heart. The ethanolamine and serine base-exchange enzyme-catalyzed reactions were associated with the sarcolemma and sarcoplasmic reticulum. There was a 17.2-fold and 6.8-fold enrichment, respectively, of the serine and the ethanolamine base-exchange enzyme activities in the sarcolemma compared to the starting whole homogenate. The sarcoplasmic reticulum was enriched in the ethanolamine and serine base-exchange enzyme activities. The choline base-exchange enzyme activity of all membranes fractions was negligible compared to the ethanolamine or serine base-exchange enzyme activities. The apparent Km for the ethanolamine and serine base-exchange enzyme in sarcolemma was 14 microM and 25 microM, respectively. The pH optimum for these base-exchange activities was 7.5-8.0. There was a dependence upon Ca2+ for these reactions with a 1 or 4 mM concentration required for maximal activity. The properties of the sarcoplasmic reticulum base-exchange enzymes were similar to the sarcolemmal base-exchange enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
1. Analogues of ethanolamine and choline were incubated with different labelled precursors of phospholipids and isolated hepatocytes and the effects on phospholipid synthesis were studied. 2. 2-Aminopropan-1-ol and 2-aminobutan-1-ol were the most efficient inhibitors of [(14)C]ethanolamine incorporation into phospholipids, whereas the incorporation of [(3)H]choline was inhibited most extensively by NN-diethylethanolamine and NN-dimethylethanolamine. 3. When the analogues were incubated with [(3)H]glycerol and hepatocytes, the appearance of (3)H in unnatural phospholipids indicated that they were incorporated, at least in part, via CDP-derivatives. The distribution of [(3)H]glycerol among molecular species of phospholipids containing 2-aminopropan-1-ol and 1-aminopropan-2-ol was the same as in phosphatidylethanolamine. In other phospholipid analogues the distribution of (3)H was more similar to that in phosphatidylcholine. 4. NN-Diethylethanolamine stimulated both the conversion of phosphatidylethanolamine into phosphatidylcholine and the incorporation of [Me-(14)C]methionine into phospholipids. Other N-alkyl- or NN-dialkyl-ethanolamines also stimulated [(14)C]methionine incorporation, but inhibited the conversion of phosphatidylethanolamine into phosphatidylcholine. This indicates that phosphatidyl-NN-diethylethanolamine is a poor methyl acceptor, in contrast with other N-alkylated phosphatidylethanolamines. 5. These results on the regulation of phospholipid metabolism in intact cells are discussed with respect to the possible control points. They also provide guidelines for future experiments on the manipulation of phospholipid polar-headgroup composition in primary cultures of hepatocytes.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of ethanolamine, choline, and different fatty acids on phospholipid synthesis via the CDP-ester pathways were studied in isolated rat intestinal villus cells. The incorporation of [14C]glucose into phosphatidylethanolamine was stimulated severalfold by the addition of ethanolamine and long-chained unsaturated fatty acids, while the addition of lauric acid inhibited the incorporation of radioactivity into phosphatidylethanolamine. At concentrations of ethanolamine higher than 0.2 mM, phosphoethanolamine accumulated, but the concentrations of CDP-ethanolamine and the incorporation of radioactivity into phospatidylethanolamine did not increase further. The incorporation of [14C]glucose into phosphatidylcholine responded in a way similar to that of phosphatidylethanolamine, except that a 10-fold higher concentration of choline was required for maximal stimulation. CCC inhibited the incorporation of choline into phosphatidylcholine. In contrast with hepatocytes, villus cells did not form phosphatidylcholine via phospholipid N-methylation. The data indicate that, in intestinal villus cells, the cytidylyltransferase reactions are rate limiting in the synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine and probably also of phosphatidylcholine. The availability of diacylglycerol and its fatty acid composition may also significantly affect the rate of phospholipid synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of cAMP analogues on phosphatidylcholine formation via the CDP-choline pathway was investigated in cultured monolayers of rat hepatocytes. Treatment with chlorophenylthio-cAMP or the cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, aminophylline, reduced the total uptake of [methyl-3H]choline by 32 and 26% (p less than 0.01), respectively. Chlorophenylthio-cAMP inhibited the incorporation of [methyl-3H]choline into phosphatidylcholine by 2.5-fold (p less than 0.001) and reduced the rate of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis by approximately 40%. Aminophylline, 8-bromoadenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and N6,O2'-dibutyryladenosine 3':5'-monophosphate also inhibited [methyl-3H]choline incorporation into phosphatidylcholine. Although choline kinase and phosphocholinetransferase activities were stimulated by chlorophenylthio-cAMP treatment, CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity was reduced 46% (p less than 0.01). The results indicate that cytidylyltransferase may be phosphorylated and inhibited by cAMP-dependent protein kinases.  相似文献   

18.
The incorporation of [methyl-14C]CDP-choline into phosphatidylcholine was measured in HeLa cells permeabilized with 0.125 mg digitonin/mL. The rate of phosphatidylcholine formation was influenced by the concentration of CDP-choline in the medium. The CDP-choline:1,2-diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase in permeabilized cells showed a Km of 88 microM for CDP-choline. A similar Km value of 104 microM was found for cholinephosphotransferase in microsomes isolated from HeLa cells when assayed in the presence of 2.4 mM dioleoylglycerol. In the absence of added diacylglycerol, the Km for CDP-choline for the microsomal cholinephosphotransferase was only 38 microM. The incorporation of [methyl-14C]CDP-choline into phosphatidylcholine was stimulated by the supply of diacylglycerol in both HeLa cells and isolated microsomes. A 2.4 mM dioleoylglycerol suspension increased cholinephosphotransferase activity fourfold in microsomes. The digitonin-treated cells were impermeable to the dioleoylglycerol suspension. Incubation of permeabilized cells with 150 microM acyl-CoA and 0.8 mM glycero-3-phosphate tripled cellular diacylglycerol levels, causing a doubling in the rate of phosphatidylcholine synthesis. A similar incubation of microsomes with acyl-CoA stimulated phosphatidylcholine synthesis twofold. Furthermore, incubation of microsomes with [3H]diacylglycerol and [14C]CDP-choline showed that both of the substrates were incorporated into phosphatidylcholine at the same rate. This result suggests that the stimulatory effects on cholinephosphotransferase arise from increases in the availability of substrates rather than activation of the enzyme. These results suggest that both in the permeabilized cells and in isolated membranes, the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine can be limited by both CDP-choline and diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

19.
Short time effect of oleate and 1-O-alkyl-2-O-methyl-rac-glycero-3-phosphocholine (AMGPC) on choline incorporation into phosphatidylcholines were studied in HL-60 cells. The non lytic concentration of 50 microM oleate induced a three-fold increase in [3H]choline incorporation into phosphatidylcholine. This stimulation was accompanied by a translocation of the CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.15) from cytosol to membranes. By contrast, the ether-lipid AMGPC inhibited [3H]choline incorporation into phosphatidylcholine by 60% at 10 microM. AMGPC had no effect on choline kinase or choline phosphotransferase activities. When AMGPC was added separately to an homogenate, a particulate or a cytosolic fraction, cytidylyltransferase inhibition was observed only in the homogenate. However on particulates recovered from homogenates treated with increasing concentrations of AMGPC, membranous cytidylyltransferase activity decreased dose-dependently. Thus AMGPC had no effect on cytidylyltransferase activity itself but inhibited its translocation from cytosol to membrane. At variance with the well-established positive effect on cytidylyltransferase translocation induced by fatty acids, this is the first demonstration that AMGPC can inhibit cytidylyltransferase translocation in cell-free system.  相似文献   

20.
Mudd SH  Datko AH 《Plant physiology》1989,90(1):306-310
The results of experiments in which intact plants of Lemna paucicostata were labeled with either l-[3H3C]methionine, l-[14CH3]methionine, or [1,2-14C]ethanolamine support the conclusion that growth in concentrations of choline of 3.0 micromolar or above brings about marked decreases in the rate of biosynthesis of methylated forms of ethanolamine (normally present chiefly as phosphatidylcholine, with lesser amounts of choline and phosphocholine). The in vivo locus of the block is at the committing step in the biosynthetic sequence at which phosphoethanolamine is methylated by S-adenosylmethionine to form phosphomethylethanolamine. The block is highly specific: flow of methyl groups originating in methionine continues into S-adenosylmethionine, S-methylmethionine, the methyl moieties of pectin methyl ester, and other methylated metabolites. When choline uptake is less than the total that would be synthesized by control plants, phosphoethanolamine methylation is down-regulated to balance the uptake; total plant content of choline and its derivatives remains essentially constant. At maximum down-regulation, phosphoethanolamine methylation continues at 5 to 10% of normal. A specific decrease in the total available activity of AdoMet: phosphoethanolamine N-methyltransferase, as well as feedback inhibition of this enzyme by phosphocholine, and prevention of accumulation of phosphoethanolamine by down-regulation of ethanolamine synthesis may each contribute to effective control of phosphoethanolamine methylation. This down-regulation may necessitate major changes in S-adenosylmethionine metabolism. Such changes are discussed.  相似文献   

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