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1.
A. K. Stobart  S. Stymne 《Planta》1985,163(1):119-125
The utilisation of [14C]glycerol 3-phosphate and [14C]linoleoyl-CoA in the synthesis of triacylglycerol has been studied in the microsomal preparations of developing cotyledons of safflower seed. The results confirm that the glycerol backbone, which flows towards triacylglycerol from phosphatidic acid through the Kennedy pathway, can enter phosphatidylcholine from diacylglycerol. The equilibration between diacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine offers a mechanism for the return of oleate to phosphatidylcholine for desaturation to linoleate. We have established that the oleate entering position 1 of sn-phosphatidylcholine from diacylglycerol is desaturated in situ to linoleate. The results indicate that the diacylglycerol phosphatidylcholine interconvertion coupled to the acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine brings about the continuous enrichment of the glycerol backbone with C18-polyunsaturated fatty acids and hence these enzymes are of major importance in regulating the acyl quality of the accumulating triacylglycerols. Microsomal preparations from avocado mesocarp, however, did not have detectable acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and phosphatidylcholine or diacylglycerol phosphatidylcholine interconversion despite the high activity of the enzymes of the Kennedy pathway. A scheme is presented which incorporates many of the observations on triacylglycerol synthesis and provides a working model for the regulation of acyl quality in linoleate-rich vegetable oils.Abbreviation BSA bovine serum albumin  相似文献   

2.
The synthesis of triacylglycerols was investigated in microsomes (microsomal fractions) prepared from the developing cotyledons of sunflower (Helianthus annuus). Particular emphasis was placed on the mechanisms involved in controlling the C18- unsaturated-fatty-acid content of the oils. We have demonstrated that the microsomes were capable of: the transfer of oleate from acyl-CoA to position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine for its subsequent desaturation and the return of the polyunsaturated products to the acyl-CoA pool by further acyl exchange; the acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate with acyl-CoA to yield phosphatidic acid, which was further utilized in diacyl- and tri-acylglycerol synthesis; and (3) the equilibrium of a diacylglycerol pool with phosphatidylcholine. The acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine coupled to the equilibration of diacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine brings about the continuous enrichment of the glycerol backbone with C18 polyunsaturated fatty acids for triacylglycerol production. Similar reactions were found to operate in another oilseed plant, safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.). On the other hand, the microsomes of avocado (Persea americana) mesocarp, which synthesize triacylglycerol via the Kennedy [(1961) Fed. Proc. Fed. Am. Soc. Exp. Biol. 20, 934-940] pathway, were deficient in acyl exchange and the diacylglycerol in equilibrium phosphatidylcholine interconversion. The results provide a working model that helps to explain the relationship between C18- unsaturated-fatty-acid synthesis and triacylglycerol production in oilseeds.  相似文献   

3.
Glycerol 3-phosphate acylation was studied in type II cells isolated from adult rat lung. The process was found to be largely microsomal. In the microsomes phosphatidic acid is the main product of glycerol 3-phosphate acylation. Glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase is rate limiting in the phosphatidic acid formation by the microsomes. Type II cell microsomes incorporate palmitoyl and oleoyl residues into phosphatidic acid at an equal rate if palmitoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA are added separately. However, if palmitoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA are added as an equimolar mixture the unsaturated fatty acyl moiety is incorporated much faster. Under the latter conditions monoenoic species constitute the most abundant products of glycerol 3-phosphate acylation. The microsomes incorporate both palmitoyl and oleoyl residues readily into both the 1- and 2-position of phosphatidic acid, even when palmitoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA are added together. Assuming that both phosphatidic acid phosphatase and cholinephosphotransferase do not discriminate against substrates with an unsaturated acyl moiety at the 1-position and a saturated acyl moiety at the 2-position, the last two observations indicate that a considerable percentage of phosphatidylcholine molecules synthesized de novo may have a saturated fatty acid at the 2-position and an unsaturated fatty acid at the 1-position, and that remodeling at the 1-position may be important for the formation of surfactant dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. They also indicate that type II cell microsomes are capable of synthesizing the dipalmitoyl species of phosphatidic acid. However, since there is a preference for the acylation of glycerol 3-phosphate with unsaturated fatty acyl residues, the percentage of dipalmitoyl species in the synthesized phosphatidic acid, and thereby the percentage of dipalmitoyl species in the phosphatidylcholine synthesized de novo, will probably depend on the relative availability of the various acyl-CoA species.  相似文献   

4.
Acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine occurs in the microsomal preparations of developing safflower cotyledons. Evidence is presented to show that the acyl exchange is catalysed by the combined back and forward reactions of an acyl-CoA:lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.23). The back reaction of the enzyme was demonstrated by the stimulation of the acyl exchange with free CoA and by the observation that the added CoA was acylated with acyl groups from position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. Re-acylation of the, endogenously produced, lysophosphatidylcholine with added acyl-CoA occurred with the same specificity as that observed with added palmitoyl lysophosphatidylcholine. A similar acyl exchange, catalysed by an acyl-CoA:lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase, occurred in microsomal preparations of rat liver. The enzyme from safflower had a high specificity for oleate and linoleate, whereas arachidonate was the preferred acyl group in the rat liver microsomal preparations. The rate of the back reaction was 3-5% and 0.2-0.4% of the forward reaction in the microsomal preparations of safflower and rat liver respectively. Previous observations, that the acyl exchange in safflower microsomal preparations was stimulated by bovine serum albumin and sn-glycerol 3-phosphate, can now be explained by the lowered acyl-CoA concentrations in the incubation mixture with albumin and in the increase in free CoA in the presence of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate (by rapid acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate with acyl groups from acyl-CoA to yield phosphatidic acid). Bovine serum albumin and sn-glycerol 3-phosphate, therefore, shift the equilibrium in acyl-CoA:lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase-catalysed reactions towards the rate-limiting step in the acyl exchange process, namely the removal of acyl groups from phosphatidylcholine. The possible role of the acyl exchange in the transfer of acyl groups between complex lipids is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Sten Stymne  Allan K. Stobart 《Planta》1985,164(1):101-104
Microsomal preparations from developing linseed (Linum usitatissimum L.) cotyledons catalyzed i) acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine, ii) acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate to yield phosphatidic acid, and iii) the utilisation of phosphatidic acid in the production of diacylglycerol and triacylglycerol. Selectivity studies for C18 acyl species of acyl-CoA indicated a bias for the channelling of oleate to phosphatidylcholine for, presumably, its desaturation, and the utilisation of the polyunsaturated fatty-acid products in the acyl-CoA pool for phosphatidic acid and subsequent triacylglycerol synthesis. The microsomal preparations were capable of returning glycerol backbone with associated acyl components to phosphatidylcholine from diacylglycerol where it may be further enriched with polyunsaturated C18 acids by desaturation. The acyl quality in linolenate-rich oilseeds appears to be under similar control to that found in linoleate-rich species. Present address: To whom the correspondence should be addressed  相似文献   

6.
Microsomal preparations from the developing cotyledons of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) catalyse the acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate in the presence of acyl-CoA. Under these conditions the radioactive glycerol in sn-glycerol 3-phosphate accumulates in phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylcholine, diacyl- and tri-acylglycerol. The incorporation of glycerol into phosphatidylcholine is via diacylglycerol and probably involves a cholinephosphotransferase. The results show that the glycerol moiety and the acyl components in phosphatidylcholine exchange with the diacylglycerol during the biosynthesis of diacylglycerol from phosphatidic acid. The continuous reversible transfer of diacylglycerol with phosphatidylcholine, which operates during active triacylglycerol synthesis, will control in part the polyunsaturated-fatty-acid quality of the final seed oil.  相似文献   

7.
Microsomal preparations from the developing cotyledons of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) catalysed the acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate in the presence of acyl-CoA. The resulting phosphatidate was further utilized in the synthesis of diacyl- and tri-acylglycerol by the reactions of the so-called 'Kennedy pathway' [Kennedy (1961) Fed. Proc. Fed. Am. Soc. Exp. Biol. 20, 934-940]. Diacylglycerol equilibrated with the phosphatidylcholine pool when glycerol backbone, with the associated acyl groups, flowed from phosphatidate to triacylglycerol. The formation of diacylglycerol from phosphatidate through the action of a phosphatidate phosphohydrolase (phosphatidase) was substantially inhibited by EDTA and, under these conditions, phosphatidate accumulated in the microsomal membranes. The inhibition of the phosphatidase by EDTA was alleviated by Mg2+. The presence of Mg2+ in all incubation mixtures stimulated quite considerably the synthesis of triacylglycerol in vitro. Microsomal preparations incubated with acyl-CoA, sn-glycerol 3-phosphate and EDTA synthesized sufficient phosphatidate for the reliable analysis of its intramolecular fatty acid distribution. In the presence of mixed acyl-CoA substrates the sn-glycerol 3-phosphate was acylated exclusively in position 1 with the saturated fatty acids, palmitate and stearate. The polyunsaturated fatty acid linoleate was, however, utilized largely in the acylation of position 2 of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate. The affinity of the enzymes involved in the acylation of positions 1 and 2 of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate for specific species of acyl-CoA therefore governs the non-random distribution of the different acyl groups in the seed triacylglycerols. The acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate in position 1 with saturated acyl components also accounts for the presence of these groups in position 1 of sn-phosphatidylcholine through the equilibration of diacylglycerol with the phosphatidylcholine pool, which occurs when phosphatidate is utilized in the synthesis of triacylglycerol. These results add further credence to our previous proposals for the regulation of the acyl quality of the triacylglycerols that accumulate in developing oil seeds [Stymne & Stobart (1984) Biochem. J. 220, 481-488; Stobart & Stymne (1985) Planta 163, 119-125].  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Embryos of Cuphea lanceolata have more than 80 mol% of decanoic acid ('capric acid') in their triacylglycerols, while this fatty acid is virtually absent in phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho). Seed development was complete 25-27 days after pollination, with rapid triacylglycerol deposition occurring between 9 and 24 days. PtdCho amounts increased until day 15 after pollination. Analysis of embryo lipids showed that the diacylglycerol (DAG) pool consisted of mainly long-chain molecular species, with a very small amount of mixed medium-chain/long-chain glycerols. Almost 100% of the fatty acid at position sn-2 in triacylglycerols (TAG) was decanoic acid. When equimolar mixtures of [14C]decanoic and [14C]oleic acid were fed to whole detached embryos, over half of the radioactivity in the DAG resided in [14C]oleate, whereas [14C]decanoic acid accounted for 93% of the label in the TAG. Microsomal preparations from developing embryos at the mid-stage of TAG accumulation catalysed the acylation of [14C]glycerol 3-phosphate with either decanoyl-CoA or oleoyl-CoA, resulting in the formation of phosphatidic acid (PtdOH), DAG and TAG. Very little [14C]glycerol entered PtdCho. In combined incubations, with an equimolar supply of [14C]oleoyl-CoA and [14C]decanoyl-CoA in the presence of glycerol 3-phosphate, the synthesized PtdCho species consisted to 95% of didecanoic and dioleic species. The didecanoyl-glycerols were very selectively utilized over the dioleoylglycerols in the production of TAG. Substantial amounts of [14C]oleate, but not [14C]decanoate, entered PtdCho. The microsomal preparations of developing embryos were used to assess the acyl specificities of the acyl-CoA:sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (GPAT, EC 2.3.1.15) and the acyl-CoA:sn-1-acyl-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (LPAAT, EC 2.3.1.51) in Cuphea lanceolata embryos. The efficiency of acyl-CoA utilization by the GPAT was in the order decanoyl = dodecanoyl greater than linoleoyl greater than myristoyl = oleoyl greater than palmitoyl. Decanoyl-CoA was the only acyl donor to be utilized to any extent by the LPAAT when sn-decanoylglycerol 3-phosphate was the acyl acceptor. sn-1-Acylglycerol 3-phosphates with acyl groups shorter than 16 carbon atoms did not serve as acyl acceptors for long-chain (greater than or equal to 16 carbon atoms) acyl-CoA species. On the basis of the results obtained, we propose a schematic model for triacylglycerol assembly and PtdCho synthesis in a tissue specialized in the synthesis of high amounts of medium-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

10.
Developing cocoa cotyledons accumulate initially an unsaturated oil which is particularly rich in oleate and linoleate. However, as maturation proceeds, the characteristic high stearate levels appear in the storage triacylglycerols. In the early stages of maturation, tissue slices of developing cotyledons (105 days post anthesis, dpa) readily accumulate radioactivity from [14C]acetate into the diacylglycerols and label predominantly palmitate and oleate. In older tissues (130 dpa), by contrast, the triacylglycerols are extensively labelled and, at the same time, there is an increase in the percentage labelling of stearate. Thus, the synthesis of triacylglycerol and the production of stearate are co-ordinated during development. The relative labelling of the phospholipids (particularly phosphatidylcholine) was rather low at both stages of development which contrasts with oil seeds that accumulate a polyunsaturated oil (e.g. safflower). Microsomal membrane preparations from the developing cotyledons readily utilised an equimolar [14C]acyl-CoA substrate (consisting of palmitate, stearate and oleate) and glycerol 3-phosphate to form phosphatidate, diacylglycerol and triacylglycerol. Analysis of the [14C]acyl constituents at the sn-1 and sn-2 positions of phosphatidate and diacylglycerol revealed that the first acylase enzyme (glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase) selectively utilised palmitate over stearate and excluded oleate, whereas the second acylase (lysophosphatidate acyltransferase) was highly selective for the unsaturated acyl-CoA. On the other hand, the third acylase (diacylglycerol acyltransferase) exhibited an almost equal selectivity for palmitate and stearate. Thus, stearate is preferentially enriched at position sn-3 of triacylglycerol at 120–130 dpa because of the relatively higher selectivity of the diacylglycerol acyltransferase for this fatty acid compared with those of the other two acylation enzymes.Abbreviation dpa days post anthesis We are grateful to Drs. G. Pettipher (Cadbury-Schweppes, Reading, UK), M. End and P. Hadley (Department of Horticulture, University of Reading) for the supply of cocoa pods and to the Agricultural and Food Research Council for financial support. We also wish to thank Dr. S. Stymne (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden) for a generous gift of acyl-CoA substrates.  相似文献   

11.
Fatty acid biosynthesis in the leaves of barley, wheat and pea.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
1. The incorporation of radioactivity from [1-14C]acetate into the leaf lipids of barley, pea and wheat has been studied in pulse-labelling experiments. 2. There was little increase in the total labelling of lipids after the leaves were transferred to non-radioactive medium. However, there was an increase in the relative labelling of unsaturated fatty acids. In addition, there was an increase in the relative labelling of diacylgalactosylglycerol. 3. The principal radioactively labelled acyl lipids were diacylgalactosylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidylcholine showed a decreasing proportion of [14C]oleate and an increasing amount of [14C]linoleate with time. Diacylgalactosylglycerol also had decreasing amounts of [14C]oleate but, in addition, had an increasing proportion of [14C]linolenate with time. 4. The absence of significant amounts of [14C]linolenate in phosphatidylcholine appeared to exclude a role for this phospholipid in linoleate desaturation. 5. The specific radioactivities of oleate and linoleate in phosphatidylcholine, diacylgalactosylglycerol and diacylgalabiosylglycerol were very similar in any single experiment. It was concluded that these fatty acids can rapidly exchange between the three intact lipids.  相似文献   

12.
Microsomal membrane preparations from the immature cotyledons of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) catalysed the interconversion of the neutral lipids, mono-, di-, and triacylglycerol. Membranes were incubated with neutral lipid substrates, 14C-labelled either in the acyl or glycerol moiety, and the incorporation of radioactivity into other complex lipids determined. It was clear that diacylglycerol gave rise to triacylglycerol and monoacylglycerol as well as phosphatidylcholine. Radioactivity from added [14C] triacylglycerol was to a small extent transferred to diacylglycerol whereas added [14C] monoacylglycerol was rapidly converted to diacylglycerols and triacylglycerols. The formation of triacylglycerol from diacylglycerol occurred in the absence of acyl-CoA and hence did not involve diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DAGAT) activity. Monoacylglycerol was not esterified by direct acylation from acyl-CoA. We propose that these reactions were catalyzed by a diacylglycerol: diacylglycerol transacylase which yielded triacylglycerol and monoacylglycerol, the reaction being freely reversible. The specific activity of the transacylase was some 25% of the diacylglycerol acyltransferase activity and, hence, during the net accumulation of oil, substantial newly formed triacylglycerol equilibrated with the diacylglycerol pool. In its turn the diacylglycerol rapidly interconverted with phosphatidylcholine, the major complex lipid substrate for Δ12 desaturation. Hence, the oleate from triacylglycerols entering phosphatidylcholine via this route could be further desaturated to linoleate. A model is presented which reconciles these observations with our current understanding of fatty acid desaturation in phosphatidylcholine and oil assembly in oleaceous seeds. Received: 8 November 1996 / Accepted: 5 February 1997  相似文献   

13.
The developing seeds of Borago officinalis (common borage) accumulate a triacylglycerol oil that is relatively rich in the uncommon fatty acid gamma-linolenate (octadec-6,9,12-trienoic acid). Incubation of developing, whole, cotyledons with [14C]oleate and [14C]linoleate showed that the gamma-linolenate was synthesized by the sequential desaturation of oleate----linoleate----gamma-linolenate. Microsomal membrane preparations from the developing cotyledons contained an active delta 6-desaturase enzyme that catalysed the conversion of linoleate into gamma-linolenate. Experiments were designed to manipulate the [14C]linoleate content of the microsomal phosphatidylcholine. The [14C]linoleoyl phosphatidylcholine labelled in situ was converted into gamma-linolenoyl phosphatidylcholine in the presence of NADH. The substrate for the delta 6-desaturase in borage was, therefore, the linoleate in the complex microsomal lipid phosphatidylcholine, rather than, as in animals, the acyl-CoA. This was further confirmed in experiments that compared the specific radioactivity of the gamma-linolenate, in acyl-CoA and phosphatidylcholine, that was synthesized when [14C]linoleoyl-CoA was incubated with microsomal membranes, NADH and non-radioactive gamma-linolenoyl-CoA. The delta 6-desaturase was positionally specific and only utilized the linoleate in position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. Analysis of the positional distribution of fatty acids in the endogenous microsomal sn-phosphatidylcholine showed that, whereas position 1 contained substantial linoleate, only small amounts of gamma-linolenate were present. The results shed further light on the synthesis of C18 polyunsaturated fatty acids in plants and in particular its relationship to the regulation of the acyl quality of the triacylglycerols in oilseeds.  相似文献   

14.
Developing cotyledons of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) readily utilised exogenously supplied 14C-labelled fatty-acid substrates for the synthesis of triacylglycerols. The other major radioactive lipids were phosphatidylcholine and diacylglycerol. In safflower cotyledons, [14C]oleate was rapidly transferred to position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine and concomitant with this was the appearance of radioactive linoleate. The linoleate was further utilised in the synthesis of diacyl- and triacyl-glycerol via the reactions of the so-called Kennedy pathway. Supplying [14C]linoleate, however, resulted in a more rapid labelling of the diacylglycerols than from [14C]oleate. In contrast, sunflower cotyledons readily utilised both labelled acyl substrates for rapid diacylglycerol formation as well as incorporation into position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. In both species, however, [14C]palmitate largely entered sn-phosphatidylcholine at position 1 during triacylglycerol synthesis. The results support our previous in-vitro observations with isolated microsomal membrane preparations that (i) the entry of oleate into position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine, via acyl exchange, for desaturation to linoleate is of major importance in regulating the level of polyunsaturated fatty acids available for triacylglycerol formation and (ii) Palmitate is largely excluded from position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine and enters this phospholipid at position 1 probably via the equilibration with diacylglycerol. Specie differences appear to exist between safflower and sunflower in relation to the relative importance of acyl exchange and the interconversion of diacylglycerol with phosphatidylcholine as mechanisms for the entry of oleate into the phospholipid for desaturation.Abbreviations FW fresh weight - TLC thin-layer chromatography  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
[1-14C]Oleic and [1-14C]linoleic acids were rapidly desaturated when incubated with maize leaves from 8-day-old plants and the labeled fatty acids, and their desaturation products, were rapidly incorporated into glycerolipids. Oleic acid was desaturated to linoleate at the rate of 0.7 nmol/100 mg tissue/h and further desaturated to linolenate at about one-third this rate. The rates of linolenate formation were similar when either oleic acid or linoleic acid was the substrate although there was a 2-h lag period when oleic acid was substrate. When radioactive oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids were substrates, phosphatidylcholine was the most extensively labeled glycerolipid followed by monogalactosyldiacylglycerol. The relative rates of incorporation of label into individual glycerolipids are consistent with a movement of labeled fatty acids from phosphatidylcholine to monogalactosyldiacylglycerol and then to diagalactosyldiacylglycerol. The rates of labeling of phosphatidylcholine oleate and of phosphatidylcholine linoleate are consistent with a precursor-product relationship in that there was a delayed accumulation of phosphatidylcholine linoleate relative to that of phosphatidylcholine oleate and phosphatidylcholine linoleate continued to accumulate while phosphatidylcholine oleate declined. Linoleate formed from oleate was widely distributed in glycerolipids but neither phosphatidylcholine linolenate nor linolenate-containing diacylglycerol was detected at short and intermediate incubation times when either oleic or linoleic acid was substrate. The kinetics of incorporation of linoleate and linolenate into monogalactosyldiacylglycerol suggest a transfer of linoleate from phosphatidylcholine. The initial rate of accumulation of labeled linolenate in monogalactosyldiacylglycerol was very similar to the rate of desaturation of linoleate and it is suggested that desaturation of linoleate occurs while associated with monogalactosyl-diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

17.
Microsomes and cytosol were prepared from type II cells isolated from adult rat lung. Upon determination of the acyl-CoA composition in the microsomes, we found 49% palmitoyl-CoA, 2% myristoyl-CoA, 21% stearoyl-CoA, 5% palmitoleoyl-CoA, 16% oleoyl-CoA, 5% linoleoyl-CoA and 2% arachidonoyl-CoA. The acyl-CoA composition of the cytosol was very similar. Upon incubation of type II cell microsomes with [U-14C]glycerol 3-phosphate and with acyl-CoA species mixed in the proportions in which they were found in this cell fraction, approx. 40% of the synthesized phosphatidic acid was disaturated. Of the two quantitatively most important acyl-CoA species, the palmitoyl species was incorporated 4-times faster into total and disaturated phosphatidic acid than the stearoyl species. These two species were distributed very similarly among the phosphatidic acid species synthesized de novo. In newly formed disaturated phosphatidic acid, the palmitoyl groups were distributed approximately equally between the 1- and the 2-position. From these data, it can be estimated that of the phosphatidic acid molecules synthesized by type II cell microsomes, approx. 26% contain two palmitoyl moieties. Assuming that both phosphatidic acid phosphatase and cholinephosphotransferase are non-selective with regard to the substrate species that they convert, this would mean that 26% of the phosphatidylcholine molecules synthesized de novo would be dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. As in surfactant, approx. 60% of the phosphatidylcholine is constituted by the dipalmitoyl species, this would mean that approx. 45% of the surfactant dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine would be made via de novo synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
The acyl specificities of several acyltransferases located in the microsomal fraction of lactating rat mammary gland have been investigated using palmitate and oleate as substrates along with CoA, ATP and Mg2+, bovine serum albumin and NaF. With either sn-glycerol 3-phosphate or dihydroxyacetone phosphate (plus NADPH) as acyl acceptor, phosphatidic acid containing palmitate preferentially esterified at position-2 and oleate at position-1 was the major product. Dihydroxyacetone phosphate and sn-glycerol 3-phosphate competitively inhibited each other's acylations, suggesting that a single enzyme might be responsible for both esterifications and oleate was the preferred substrate for the formation of acyldihydroxyacetone phosphate. The specificities of the acyl-CoA–1-monoacyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphate and the acyl-CoA–2-monoacyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferases were also studied. The specificities observed combined with the relative velocities of these reactions suggest that phosphatidic acid is formed in the mammary gland with the first acylation occurring at position-1 favouring oleate followed by the second acylation at position-2 favouring palmitate. This is consistent with the unusual structure found in the triacylglycerols of rat milk. When a mouse liver microsomal fraction was used the opposite specificities were observed consistent with the structure of the triacylglycerols of mouse liver. The microsomal acylation of the monoacyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphocholines was also investigated. Although no marked acyl specificity could be detected when the 2-monoacyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphocholine was used as the acyl acceptor, both oleate and linoleate were esterified in preference to palmitate to the 1-monoacyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphocholine.  相似文献   

19.
Sparace SA  Mudd JB 《Plant physiology》1982,70(5):1260-1264
Intact chloroplasts from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L., hybrid 424) readily incorporate [14C]glycerol-3-phosphate and [14C]acetate into diacylglycerol, monoacylglycerol, diacylglycrol, free fatty acids (only when acetate is the precursor), phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylcholine, and most notably phosphatidylglycerol. The fraction of phosphatidylglycerol synthesized is greatly increased by the presence of manganese chloride in the reaction mixture. Glycerol-3-phosphate-labeled phosphatidylglycerol is equally labeled in the two glycerol moieties of the molecule. Acetate-labeled phosphatidylglycerol is equally labeled in both acyl groups. Position one contains primarily oleate, linoleate and small amounts of palmitate. Position two contains primarily palmitate. No radioactive trans3-hexadecenoate was detected. The labeling patterns indicate that the radioactive phosphatidylglycerol is the product of de novo chloroplast lipid biosynthesis and furthermore, phosphatidylglycerol may be a substrate for fatty acid desaturation.  相似文献   

20.
1. The patterns of incorporation of (14)C into glycerolipid fatty acids of developing maize leaf lamina from supplied [1-(14)C]acetate and from (14)CO(2) during steady-state photosynthesis were similar. Oleate of phosphatidylcholine and palmitate of phosphatidylglycerol attained linear rates of labelling more rapidly than did other fatty acids, particularly the linoleate and linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol. 2. After the transfer of lamina from labelled to unlabelled acetate, there was a decrease in labelled oleate and linoleate of phosphatidylcholine and a concomitant increase in the amount of radioactivity in the linoleate and linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol. 3. The rapidly labelled phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol, were shown by differential and sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation to be associated with different organelles, the former being mainly in a low-density membrane fraction, probably microsomal, and the latter mainly in chloroplasts. 4. During a 48h period after supplying spinach leaves with [(14)C]acetate, radioactivity was lost from the oleate of phosphatidylcholine present in fractions sedimented at 12000g and 105000g, and accumulated in the linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol of the chloroplast. 5. It is proposed that the phosphatidylcholine of some non-plastid membranes is intimately involved in the process of oleate desaturation and that this lipid serves as a donor of unsaturated C(18) fatty acids to other lipids, principally monogalactosyl diacylglycerol, of the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

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