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1.
The relationship between membrane lipid composition and membrane lipid phase transitions was investigated in Yersinia enterocolitica cells grown at 5, 22 and 37°C. The total phospholipid concentrations were 9.4, 7.3 and 6.3% of the cell dry weight for cells grown at 5, 22 and 37°C, respectively. The relative concentrations of the three major phospholipids, phosphatidylethanolamine (73–76%), phosphatidylglycerol (9–11%) and cardiolipin (11–13%) were essentially the same at all three growth temperatures. The ratios of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids were 2.2, 1.1 and 0.4 for cells grown at 5, 22 and 37°C, respectively. This change in the fatty acid composition in response to temperature changes is similar to the patterns reported for other organisms. Reversible thermotropic phase transitions were detected by calorimetric analysis in both pure lipid preparations and membrane preparations. The mid-points of the thermotropic phase transitions were at ?13, ?9 and 1°C for membranes from cells grown at 5, 22 and 37°C, respectively. The phase transitions of the membranes from cells grown at the three different temperatures occurred below the lowest growth temperature (5°C). The alternations in the fatty acid composition in Y. enterocolitica did not, therefore, appear to be required to adjust membrane fluidity but might rather be required for some other membrane function.  相似文献   

2.
Nisin interacts with target membranes in four sequential steps: binding, insertion, aggregation, and pore formation. Alterations in membrane composition might influence any of these steps. We hypothesized that cold temperatures (10 degrees C) and surfactant (0.1% Tween 20) in the growth medium would influence Listeria monocytogenes membrane lipid composition, membrane fluidity, and, as a result, sensitivity to nisin. Compared to the membranes of cells grown at 30 degrees C, those of L. monocytogenes grown at 10 degrees C had increased amounts of shorter, branched-chain fatty acids, increased fluidity (as measured by fluorescence anisotropy), and increased nisin sensitivity. When 0.1% Tween 20 was included in the medium and the cells were cultured at 30 degrees C, there were complex changes in lipid composition. They did not influence membrane fluidity but nonetheless increased nisin sensitivity. Further investigation found that these cells had an increased ability to bind radioactively labeled nisin. This suggests that the modification of the surfactant-adapted cell membrane increased nisin sensitivity at the binding step and demonstrates that each of the four steps can contribute to nisin sensitivity.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane fluidity adaptation to the low growth temperature in Bacillus subtilis involves two distinct mechanisms: (1) long-term adaptation accomplished by increasing the ratio of anteiso- to iso-branched fatty acids and (2) rapid desaturation of fatty acid chains in existing phospholipids by induction of fatty acid desaturase after cold shock. In this work we studied the effect of medium composition on cold adaptation of membrane fluidity. Bacillus subtilis was cultivated at optimum (40 degrees C) and low (20 degrees C) temperatures in complex medium with glucose or in mineral medium with either glucose or glycerol. Cold adaptation was characterized by fatty acid analysis and by measuring the midpoint of phospholipid phase transition T(m) (differential scanning calorimetry) and membrane fluidity (DPH fluorescence polarization). Cells cultured and measured at 40 degrees C displayed the same membrane fluidity in all three media despite a markedly different fatty acid composition. The T(m) was surprisingly the highest in the case of a culture grown in complex medium. On the contrary, cultivation at 20 degrees C in the complex medium gave rise to the highest membrane fluidity with concomitant decrease of T(m) by 10.5 degrees C. In mineral media at 20 degrees C the corresponding changes of T(m) were almost negligible. After a temperature shift from 40 to 20 degrees C, the cultures from all three media displayed the same adaptive induction of fatty acid desaturase despite their different membrane fluidity values immediately after cold shock.  相似文献   

4.
Adaptative responses of ectothermic organisms to thermal variation typically involve the reorganization of membrane glycerophospholipids (GPLs) to maintain membrane function. We investigated how acclimation at 15, 20 and 25 degrees C during preimaginal development influences the thermal tolerance and the composition of membrane GPLs in adult Drosophila melanogaster. Long-term cold survival was significantly improved by low acclimation temperature. After 60 h at 0 degrees C, more than 80% of the 15 degrees C-acclimated flies survived while none of the 25 degrees C-acclimated flies survived. Cold shock tolerance (1h at subzero temperatures) was also slightly better in the cold acclimated flies. LT50 shifted down by ca 1.5 degrees C in 15 degrees C-acclimated flies in comparison to those acclimated at 25 degrees C. In contrast, heat tolerance was not influenced by acclimation temperature. Low temperature acclimation was associated with the increase in proportion of ethanolamine (from 52.7% to 58.5% in 25 degrees C-acclimated versus 15 degrees C-acclimated flies, respectively) at the expense of choline in GPLs. Relatively small, but statistically significant changes in lipid molecular composition were observed with decreasing acclimation temperature. In particular, the proportions of glycerophosphoethanolamines with linoleic acid (18:2) at the sn-2 position increased. No overall change in the degree of fatty acid unsaturation was observed. Thus, cold tolerance but not heat tolerance was influenced by preimaginal acclimation temperature and correlated with the changes in GPL composition in membranes of adult D. melanogaster.  相似文献   

5.
Crucian carp (Carassius carassius) is an excellent vertebrate model for studies on temperature adaptation in biological excitable membranes, since the species can tolerate temperatures from 0 to +36 degrees C. To determine how temperature affects the lipid composition of brain, the fish were acclimated for 4 wk at +30, +16, or +4 degrees C in the laboratory, or seasonally acclimatized individuals were captured from the wild throughout the year (temperature = +1 to +23 degrees C), and the brain glycerophospholipid and sphingolipid compositions were analyzed in detail by electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry. Numerous significant temperature-related changes were found in the molecular species composition of the membrane lipids. The most notable and novel finding was a large (approximately 3-fold) increase of the di-22:6n-3 phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine species in the cold. Since the increase of 22:6n-3 in the total fatty acyl pool of the brain was small, the formation of di-22:6n-3 aminophospholipid species appears to be a specific adaptation to low temperature. Such highly unsaturated species could be needed to maintain adequate membrane fluidity in the vicinity of transporters and other integral membrane proteins. Plasmalogens increased somewhat at higher temperatures, possibly to protect membranes against oxidation. The modifications of brain lipidome during the 4-wk laboratory acclimation were, in many respects, similar to those found in the wild, which indicates that the seasonal changes observed in the wild are temperature dependent rather than induced by other environmental factors.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The phase behavior of plasma membrane (PM), endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and nuclear membranes (NM) isolated from adult rat papillary cells was studied using the molecular probe Laurdan. The steady-state fluorescence data analysis was correlated with the lipid composition obtained by biochemical assays. The comparison between intact membranes and protein-free reconstituted vesicles using the whole lipid extract shows the essential role of proteins on the temperature response of natural membranes. The phospholipid (PL) and cholesterol (Cho) content was measured in the three membrane fractions, the PL/Cho molar ratio being between 1.5 and 1.9. However, Laurdan's parameters in NM show a fluid phase state pattern even at low temperature (5 degrees C), with a restricted dipole relaxation in comparison with that displayed in liquid crystalline phase state lipid model membranes. PM and ER are in a gel-like state at temperatures below 20 degrees C, showing increasing dipole relaxation with temperature. The curved fits obtained are characteristic of cholesterol-enriched membranes. The distinctive phase behavior of nuclear membranes vanishes when proteins are extracted. However, relaxation is still faster in this fraction, which correlates with the native lipid composition. NM has the lowest percentage of phosphatidylinositol and sphingomyelin-the latter being a highly saturated phospholipid- and the highest percentage of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), nuclear PE being enriched in arachidonic acid. All these changes agree with the higher fluidity of NM compared with ER or PM in the conditions assayed.  相似文献   

8.
Experiments were conducted on the effect of growth temperature on phospholipids of Neurospora. Strains grown at high (37 degrees C) and low (15 degrees C) temperatures show large differences in the proportions of phospholipid fatty acid alpha-linolenate (18 : 3) which can vary by 10-fold over this temperature range. Changes in the phospholipid base composition are less dramatic; the most significant is an increase in phosphatidylethanolamines at low temperatures accompanied by a concomitant decrease in phosphatidylcholine. It appears that phospholipid fatty acid desaturation is closely regulated with respect to growth temperature. Over the 37 to 15 degrees C growth temperature range there appear to be at least two desaturase systems in Neurospora which are under different controls. Production of 18 : 1 and 18 : 2 species appears to occur at high levels over the entire temperature range, whereas the production of 18 : 3 seems to be inversely related to growth temperature. Shifting 37 degrees C-acclimated cultures to 15 degrees C produces a growth lag period of approximately 3 h, during which the level of 18 : 3 increases markedly. Differential scanning calorimetry of phospholipids from 37 degrees C cells shows a phase transition at -22 degrees C while lipids from 15 degrees C cultures exhibit a phase transition with reduced enthalpy at about -41 degrees C. The data are consistent with the idea that phospholipid composition in Neurospora is under strict control and suggest that membrane fluidity is regulated with respect to growth temperature through changes in membrane lipid composition.  相似文献   

9.
A detailed analysis of the low temperature-induced alterations of Dunaliella salina (UTEX 1644) microsomal membrane lipids was carried out. Microsomal membranes were isolated from cells grown at 30 degrees C, from cells shifted to 12 degrees C for 12 hours, and from cells acclimated to 12 degrees C. Fatty acid analyses of the major lipid classes demonstrated significant changes in the fatty acid composition of phosphatidylcholinemine (PE) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG) but not phosphatidylcholine (PC) during the initial 12 hours at low temperature. These changes did not entail enhanced desaturation of linoleic acid. Subsequent to 12 hours, the proportions of linolenic acid increased in all phospholipids.Molecular species analyses of the phospholipids demonstrated that the most immediate changes following a shift to low temperature were limited to several molecular species of PE and PG. The changes observed in PE included a decrease in C(30) species and concomitant increases in C(34) and C(36) species. Compositional changes associated with PG entailed the emergence of a new molecular species (18:1/18:1) not found at 30 degrees C. The retailoring of molecular species resulted in an increase in the number of species having two unsaturated acyl chains and did not reflect a simple enhancement of desaturase activity as suggested by the fatty acid analysis. We conclude that the initial alterations in response to low temperature stress involve discrete changes in certain molecular species. These and further alterations of molecular species following acclimation to low temperature would appear to augment increases in acyl chain desaturation as a means of modifying membrane properties in response to low temperature stress.  相似文献   

10.
The present study investigated whether the cold‐sensitive character of soybean is reflected at the level of mitochondrial membranes. When exposed to an increase of temperature (from 25 to 35 °C), mitochondrial membranes were characterized by a higher phosphatidylcholine : phosphatidylethanolamine ratio and a lower content in 18 : 3 fatty acid. After a reduction of temperature (from 25 to 18 °C) the opposite changes were found. Lipid lateral diffusion and local microviscosity appeared to be comparable in mitochondria from plantlets grown at 25 or 35 °C when assayed at the respective growth temperatures. Some functional aspects (cytochrome c oxidase activity or membrane conductance) tended to this behaviour whereas others (respiration rate or maximum membrane potential) did not. On the other hand, membranes from plants grown at 18 °C were more rigid. Moreover, as illustrated by cytochrome c oxidase activity or respiration rate, functional measurements suggested that these membranes were less active at this temperature. Thus the dynamic characteristics and functional properties measured in mitochondrial membranes were in favour of an adaptive trend at 35 °C, but not at 18 °C despite changes in lipid composition, in accordance with the cold‐sensitive character of the plant.  相似文献   

11.
Mammalian cell metabolism is responding to changes in temperature. Body temperature is regulated around 37 degrees C, but temperatures of exposed skin areas may vary between 20 degrees C and 40 degrees C for extended periods of time without apparent disturbance of adequate cellular functions. Cellular membrane functions are depending from temperatures but also from their lipid environment, which is a major component of membrane fluidity. Temperature-induced changes of membrane fluidity may be counterbalanced by adaptive modification of membrane lipids. Temperature-dependent changes of whole cell- and of purified membrane lipids and possible homeoviscous adaptation of membrane fluidity have been studied in human skin fibroblasts cultured at 30 degrees C, 37 degrees C, and 40 degrees C for ten days. Membrane anisotropy was measured by polarized fluorescence spectroscopy using TMA-DPH for superficial and DPH for deeper membrane layers. Human fibroblasts were able to adapt themselves to hypothermic temperatures (30 degrees C) by modifying the fluidity of the deeper apolar regions of the plasma membranes as reported by changes of fluorescence anisotropy due to appropriate changes of their plasma membrane lipid composition. This could not be shown for the whole cells. At 40 degrees C growth temperature, adaptive changes of the membrane lipid composition, except for some changes in fatty acid compositions, were not seen. Independent from the changes of the membrane lipid composition, the fluorescence anisotropy of the more superficial membrane layers (TMA-DPH) increased in cells growing at 30 degrees C and decreased in cells growing at 40 degrees C.  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.
1. Membrane lipid metabolism in Acholeplasma laidlowii A EF 22 has been studied under different conditions by applying three different techniques for changing membrane viscosity: fatty acid and cholesterol supplementation and temperature changes. 2. The molar relationship between the two dominating membrane lipids, monoglucosyldiglyceride and diglucosyldiglyceride, is to a large extent determined by membrane viscosity properties. This is shown by the varying metabolic responses occurring during incorporation of different fatty acids with and without cholesterol and by temperature shift-down experiments. Higher viscosity in membranes stimulates synthesis of monoglucosyldiglyceride at the expense of diglucosyldiglyceride. Synthesis of phospho and phosphoglucolipids is affected as well. 3. Temperature shift-down from 37 degrees C to 17 degrees C results in an immediate synthesis of monoglucosyldiglyceride accompanied by an increased incorporation of unsaturated fatty acids into this lipid. Synthesis of the other membrane lipid species (containing more unsaturated fatty acids) lags behind temporarily. 4. Incorporation from an equimolar mixture of palmitic and oleic acids together with cholesterol yields greater amounts of oleic acid in membrane lipids than incorporation in the absence of cholesterol, indicating that incorporation is viscosity dependent. 5. Studies of precursor relationships reveal that all main lipids have an active turnover which differs depending on membrane composition and conditions. Furthermore, this turnover proceeds with different intra-lipid pools. 6. Isolated membranes contain no detectable lipolytic enzymes capable of hydrolyzing membrane phospho or glycolipids. It is suggested that lipid turnover is partly mediated by enzymatic interlipid conversions, thus not allowing intermediates to accumulate.  相似文献   

14.
Lipid and protein changes due to freezing in Dunning AT-1 cells   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Defining the process of cellular injury during freezing, at the molecular level, is important for cryosurgical applications. This work shows changes to both membrane lipids and protein structures within AT-1 Dunning prostate tumor cells after a freezing stress which induced extreme injury and cell death. Cells were frozen in an uncontrolled fashion to -20 or -80 degrees C. Freezing resulted in an increase in the gel to liquid crystalline phase transition temperature (T(m)) of the cellular membranes and an increase in the temperature range over which the transition occurred, as determined by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Thin layer chromatography (TLC) analysis of total lipid extracts showed free fatty acids (FFA) in the frozen samples, indicating a change in the lipid composition. The final freezing temperature had no effect on the thermotropic response of the membranes or on the FFA content of the lipid fraction. The overall protein secondary structure as determined by FTIR showed only slight changes after freezing to -20 degrees C, in contrast to a strong and apparently irreversible denaturation after freezing to -80 degrees C. Taken together, these results suggest that the decrease in viability between control and frozen cells can be correlated with small changes in the membrane lipid composition and membrane fluidity. In addition, loss of cell viability is associated with massive protein denaturation as observed in cells frozen to -80 degrees C, which was not observed in samples frozen to -20 degrees C.  相似文献   

15.
The fatty acid composition of plasma membrane derived from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells was altered in vivo by changing the dietary lipid of the tumor-bearing mice. The activity of (sodium + potassium)-adenosinetriphosphatase ((Na+ + K+ATPase), in partially purified plasma membranes, was measured ass a function of temperature. Arrhenius plots of the data were biphasic. Striking differences, dependent on the membrane fatty acid composition, were observed in the transition temperature and in the energies of activation below the transition temperature. The transition temperatures for the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase of plasma membrane derived from tumor cells grown in mice fed a regular chow diet containing a mixture of fatty acids (PMC), a 16% sunflower oil diet (PMSU), or a 4% tristearin diet (PMTS) were 20, 21, and 13.5 degrees C, respectively...  相似文献   

16.
Plasma membranes isolated from a cell-wall-less mutant of Neurospora crassa grown at 37 and 15 degrees C display large differences in lipid compositions. A free sterol-to-phospholipid ratio of 0.8 was found in 37 degrees C membranes, while 15 degrees C plasma membranes exhibited a ratio of nearly 2.0. Membranes formed under both growth conditions were found to contain glycosphingolipids. Cultures grown at the low temperature, however, were found to contain 6-fold higher levels of glycosphingolipids and a corresponding 2-fold reduction of phospholipid levels. The high glycosphingolipid content at 15 degrees C compensates for the reduced levels of phospholipids in such a way that sterol/polar lipid ratios are almost the same in plasma membranes under the two growth conditions. Temperature-dependent changes in plasma-membrane phospholipid and glycosphingolipid species were also observed. Phosphatidylethanolamine levels were sharply reduced at 15 degrees C, in addition to a moderate increase in levels of unsaturated phospholipid fatty acids. Glycosphingolipids contained high levels of long-chain hydroxy fatty acids, which constituted 75% of the total fraction at 37 degrees C, but only 50% at 15 degrees C. Compositional changes were also observed in the long-chain base component of glycosphingolipids with respect to growth temperature. Fluorescence polarization studies indicate that the observed lipid modifications in 15 degrees C plasma membranes act to modulate bulk fluidity of the plasma-membrane lipids with respect to growth temperature. These studies suggest that coordinate modulation of glycosphingolipid, phospholipid and sterol content may be involved in regulation of plasma-membrane fluid properties during temperature acclimation.  相似文献   

17.
When Brassica napus plants are grown at low temperatures (e.g., 5 degrees C) the rate of desaturation in leaves of newly formed fatty acids in both chloroplastic (MGDG) and cytosolic (PC) diacylglycerols is higher or more rapid than in plants grown at higher temperatures (e.g., 30 degrees C). This low temperature-induced increase in the rate of desaturation is lost within hours if plants are transferred to higher temperatures. However, if plants are then returned to low temperatures they regain the ability to rapidly desaturate fatty acids. This process is restored relatively slowly (over days) in contrast to the more rapid loss at high temperatures. This has important physiological consequences on the level of unsaturated fatty acids in plant membranes and the process of temperature control of the fatty acid composition of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

18.
Ceratodon purpureus (Hedw.) Brid. was grown at two temperatures, 20 and 4°C. The protonemata grown at 4°C fixed more CO2 at low temperatures; but their frost tolerance, tested as the recovery of photosynthesis after frost treatment, was not better than in the protonemata grown at 20°C. The effects of the growth temperature were studied on the membrane lipids of intact protonemata and on the lipid and protein contents of isolated thylakoid membranes. A large proportion, 70 to 90%, of the thylakoid membrane lipids was lost unless precautions were taken to inhibit the lipid-degrading enzyme activities. The lipid content of the thylakoid membranes of protonemata grown at 20 and 4°C was 3.9 and 4.8 mol (mol chlorophyll)−1, respectively. Only minor differences were found in the lipid class composition. Monogalactosyldi-acylglycerol constituted more than 50 mol-% of the thylakoid membrane lipids at both 20 and 4°C. However, each lipid class had a higher average number of double bonds per lipid molecule in cold growth conditions. The protein content of the thylakoid membranes was low at both 20 and 4°C. These characteristics of the thylakoid membranes may be a prerequisite for the observed ability of protonemata to photosynthesize even at subzero temperatures.  相似文献   

19.
1. The fatty acid composition of mitochondrial membranes from sheep and rats was altered by feeding these animals diets which were rich in unsaturated fatty acids. Changes in membrane lipid fluidity resulting from the altered membrane lipid composition were assessed by determining the upper temperature limit of the disorder-order transition (Tf) and the Arrhenius activation energy (Ea) of succinate oxidase. 2. After feeding the unsaturated fatty acid-rich diet to sheep the Ea, in the temperature range above Tf, increased from 8 to 63 kJ . mol-1 while Tf decreased from 32 to 15 degrees C. Rats fed an unsaturated fatty acid-rich diet exhibited an increase in Ea from 17 to 63 kJ . mol-1 and a decrease in Tf from 23 to 4 degrees C. 3. This decrease in Tf was related to an increase in the ratio of linoleic acid to stearic acid in the membrane lipid. Tf was not related to the proportion of unsaturated fatty acids in the membrane lipids, although an increase in unsaturation usually led to a decrease in Tf. 4. The results show that membrane lipid fluidity has a direct influence on the conformation of the active site of some membrane-associated enzymes, with the result that such enzymes display a higher Ea when the membrane lipids are comparatively more fluid. The increase in Ea of membrane-associated enzymes which accompanies changes in the physical state of membrane suggests that some proteins may phase separate with the more fluid lipids at low temperatures.  相似文献   

20.
The alteration of the degree of unsaturated fatty acids in membrane lipids has been shown to be a key mechanism in the tolerance to temperature stress of living organisms. The step that most influences the physiology of membranes has been proposed to be the amount of di-unsaturated fatty acids in membrane lipids. In this study, we found that the desaturation of fatty acid to yield the di-unsaturated fatty acid 18:2(9,12), in Spirulina platensis strain C1, was not regulated by temperature. As shown by the fatty acid composition and gene expression patterns, the levels of 18:1(9) and 18:2(9,12) remained almost constant either when the cells were grown at 35 degrees C (normal growth temperature) or 22 and 40 degrees C. The expression of desC (Delta9) and desA (Delta12) genes, which are responsible for the introduction of first and second double bonds into fatty acids, respectively, was not affected by the temperature shift from 35 to 22 degrees C or to 40 degrees C. Only the expression and mRNA stability of the desD gene (Delta6) that is responsible for the introduction of a third double bond into fatty acids were enhanced by a temperature shift from 35 to 22 degrees C, but not the shift from 35 to 40 degrees C. The increase in the level of desD mRNA elevated the desaturation of fatty acid from 18:2(9,12) to 18:3(6,9,12) at 22 degrees C. However, the increased level of 18:3(6,9,12) was observed after 36 h of incubation at 22 degrees C, indicating a slow response to temperature of fatty acid desaturation in this cyanobacterium. These findings suggest that the desaturation of fatty acids might not be a key mechanism in the response to the temperature change of S. platensis strain C1.  相似文献   

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