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1.
1. A lamellar body-enriched fraction was isolated from whole lung homogenates of mouse lung and its contamination with microsomes, mitochondria, and cytosol protein assessed by marker enzyme analyses. 2. By measuring the activity of cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2) in varying amounts of microsomes in the presence and absence of a fixed quantity of lamellar bodies, it could be demonstrated unequivocally that lamellar bodies of mouse lung lack the capacity to synthesize phosphatidylcholine de novo. 3. A similar approach allowed the conclusion that lamellar bodies of mouse lung do not contain lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.23) and lysophosphatidylcholine:lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.--), enzymes which play a putative role in the formation of pulmonary 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine. The activities of these enzymes observed in lamellar body fractions could be attributed completely to contaminating microsomes and cytosol respectively. 4. Lamellar bodies contributed to the activity of microsomal lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase by a cooperative effect. The possible role of this cooperation in the biosynthesis of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
C M Mansbach 《Enzyme》1976,21(2):137-141
Smooth and rough microsomal fractions were prepared from hamster intestinal mucosa and assayed for RNA, diglyceride acyltransferase, cholinephosphotransferase and lysolecithin acyltransferase. The specific activity of cholinephosphotransferase was 4-fold more in the rough than in the smooth microsomal fractions, whereas diglyceride and lysolecithin acyltransferases were respectively 26 and 57% more active in the rough microsomal fraction. The two acyltransferases were similarly located in the microsomes and more closely corresponded to the location of dietary lipid than cholinephosphotransferase.  相似文献   

3.
Rat brains were dissected into major anatomical regions, including caudate nucleus, cerebellum, inferior and superior colliculi, cortex, hippocampus, olfactory bulb, pituitary gland, pons-medulla, spinal cord and thalamus. Tissue fractionation yielded microsomes and cytosol which were assayed for several phospholipid synthetic enzyme activities; using a vesicle-vesicle system the cytosol fractions were also examined for intermembrane phospholipid transfer activities. For the metabolism of phosphatidylinositol, specific activities were determined for CTP: phosphatidate cytidylyltransferase and CDP-diacylglycerol: inositol phosphatidyltransferase. Regions with high phosphatidylinositol synthetic activity were pituitary gland, pons-medulla, caudate and thalamus. For the metabolism of phosphatidylcholine the measured enzymes were CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase and CDP-choline: diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase. These enzymes showed the highest activity in the colliculi, olfactory bulb, pituitary gland and pons-medulla. The pons-medulla cytosol fraction contained the highest level of phosphatidylinositol transfer activity, while the colliculi and pons-medulla had the highest level of phosphatidylcholine transfer activity. In contrast, the pituitary gland displayed the lowest levels of both phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine transfer activity. The relationships between synthetic and transfer activities are discussed in terms of regional phospholipid metabolism.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate, a typical peroxisomal proliferator, on the activities of key enzymes in the glycerophospholipid synthetic pathway and the incorporation of lipid precursors into liver lipids in vitro were studied periodically in rats. When di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate was fed at the 1% level to rats, glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity increased 2-3-fold in liver homogenates and microsomes in 2-4 days. The specific activity of microsomal CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase increased by 1.5-fold, whereas the cytosolic activity was depressed. The microsomal CDPcholine:diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase specific activity decreased, whereas the activity in the homogenates increased, suggesting the proliferation of the hepatic endoplasmic reticulum in di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate-treated rats. The incorporation of [1(3)-3H]glycerol or [1-14C]acetate into liver phospholipids in vitro increased in 2 days and stayed at a high level up to 12 days. The present study confirmed that di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate induced an enhancement of phospholipid synthesis in the liver. The increase in hepatic phospholipid synthesis by this drug is presumably linked to the proliferation of peroxisomes and other intracellular membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The topography of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and triacylglycerol biosynthetic enzymes within the transverse plane of rat liver microsomes was investigated using two impermeant inhibitors, mercury-dextran and dextran-maleimide. Between 70 and 98% of the activities of fatty acid : CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3), sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.15), phosphatidic acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.4), diacylglycerol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.20), diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2) and diacylglycerol ethanolaminephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.1) were inactivated by mercury-dextran. Dextran-maleimide caused 52% inactivation of the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase. Inactivation of each of these activities except fatty acid : CoA ligase occurred in microsomal vesicles which remained intact as evidenced by the maintenance of highly latent mannose-6-phosphatase activity (EC 3.1.3.9). These glycerolipid biosynthetic activities were not latent, indicating that substrates have free access to the active sites. Moreover, ATP, CDP-choline and CMP appeared unable to penetrate the microsome membrane. These data indicate that the active sites of thease enzymes are located on the external surface of microsomal vesicles. It is concluded that the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and triacylglycerol occurs asymmetrically on the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

6.
A new model system for the study of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis is presented. Young rats were fed a diet that contained 5% cholesterol and 2% cholate. After 6 days there was a 2-fold increase in the concentration of plasma phospholipid (243 mg/dl compared to 132 mg/dl for control animals) and a 3-fold increase in the concentration of plasma phosphatidylcholine. The rate of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis was measured after injection of [Me-3H]choline into the portal veins. The incorporation of tritium into choline, phosphocholine and betaine by liver was similar for experimental and control animals, whereas there was a 3-fold increased incorporation into phosphatidylcholine of the cholesterol/cholate-fed rats. The activities of the enzymes of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis in cytosol and microsomes were assayed. The only change detected was in the cytosolic and microsomal activities of CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase which were increased more than 2-fold in specific activity. When total cytidylyltransferase activity per liver was determined, a dramatic translocation of the enzyme to microsomes was observed. The control livers had 24% of the cytidylyltransferase activity associated with microsomes, whereas this value was 61% in the livers from cholesterol/cholate-fed rats. When the cytosolic cytidylyltransferase was assayed in the presence of phospholipid, the enzyme was stimulated several-fold and the difference in specific activity between control and cholesterol/cholate-fed rats was abolished. The increased activity in cytosol appears to be the result of a 2-fold increase in the amount of phospholipid in the cytosol from cholesterol/cholate-fed rats. The data strongly support the hypothesis that the special diet stimulates phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis by causing a translocation of the cytidylyltransferase from cytosol to microsomes where it is activated.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract— A comprehensive study has been undertaken on the subcellular and subsynaptosomal distribution of a number of markers for subcellular organelles in preparations from rat brain. Although the activity of most enzymatic markers was decreased by freezing and storage at - 70oC, no significant changes were noted in the distribution of these activities. This demonstrates that contamination of brain fractions by subcellular organelles can be accurately assessed after freezing and thawing. A marked discrepancy was noted between the distribution of three putative markers for endoplasmic reticulum. CDP-choline-diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.1) activity was mainly limited to the microsomal fraction and was present to a lesser extent in the synaptosomal fraction than the other putative markers for endoplasmic reticulum. Estrone sulfate sulfohydrolase (EC 3.1.6.2) activity demonstrated a bimodal distribution between the crude nuclear and microsomal fractions. However, considerable activity was associated with the synaptosomal fraction. NADPH-cytochrome c reductase (EC 2.3.1.15) activity sedimented in the microsomal and the synaptosomal fractions. Calculations based on the relative specific activities of the microsomal and synaptic plasma membrane fraction indicated that the contamination of the synaptic plasma membranes by endoplasmic reticulum was 44.5% (NADPH-cytochrome c reductase), 38.0% (estrone sulfatase) and 9.0% (cholinephosphotransferase). Since it is believed that virtually all of the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine by cholinephosphotransferase occurs in the neuronal and glial cell bodies, it was concluded that cholinephosphotransferase is a satisfactory marker for the endoplasmic reticulum derived from these sources. The results suggest that NADPH-cytochrome c reductase and estrone sulfatase may be present in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum system responsible for the fast transport of macromolecules along the axon to the nerve endings as well as in the endoplasmic reticulum of the cell bodies. The possible relation between that portion of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum involved in fast axonal transport and the GERL (Golgi, Endoplasmic Reticulum, Lysosomes) complex discovered by Novikoff and his coworkers (Novikoff , 1976) is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The placenta plays a major role in transporting lipid to the developing foetus. Since previous studies have suggested that placental lipid transport involves intermediate esterification steps, we investigated selected microsomal and lysosomal enzymes of triacylglycerol metabolism in rat placenta. Between gestational days 10 and 14, microsomal phosphatidic acid phosphatase specific activity was 6-fold greater than the activity in adult rat liver. Phosphatidic acid phosphatase activity decreased 50% on day 15. Studies employing several different phosphorylated substrates indicated a high degree of substrate specificity. Lysosomal triacylglycerol lipase and cholesterol esterase activities decreased about 50% between days 15 and 18, then rose late in gestation. No changes were observed in the specific activities of fatty acid: CoA ligase, glycerolphosphate acyltransferase, lysophosphatidate acyltransferase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase or diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase during the final 12 days of gestation. Kinetic observations (competitive inhibition by alternative substrates, pH-dependence and thermal inactivation) were consistent with the hypothesis that glycerol phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate can be acylated by a single microsomal enzyme in placenta. Except for fatty acid: CoA ligase, the activities of microsomal and lysosomal enzymes of triacylglycerol metabolism were comparable with those in adult rat liver. These observations are consistent with physiological studies suggesting that triacylglycerol synthetic and degradative pathways are very active in rat placenta.  相似文献   

9.
Cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase (CTP : cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.15) is located in both the microsomal and supernatant fractions of adult lung when the tissue is homogenized in 0.145 M NaCl. The activity is located predominantly in the supernatant fraction in fetal lung. Cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase in the supernatant from fetal lung is stimulated 4- to 6-fold by the additions of total lung lipid. Serine phosphoglycerides and inositol phosphoglycerides specifically caused stimulation whereas choline phosphoglycerides and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides produced no stimulation. Lysophosphatidylcholine cause some stimulation, but only at high concentrations. A number of detergents were investigated. All produced inhibition except for the ampholytic detergent, miranol H2M which was not inhibitory. None of the detergents produced any stimulation of activity. Cytidylyltransferase activity in fetal lung when assayed in the absence of lipid is about 25% of the adult. The activity when assayed in the presence of lipid is equal or slightly higher than adult levels. The activity, measured without added phospholipid, increases 5- to 6-fold within 12 h after birth, to values higher than in the adult. The activity, measured in the presence of phospholipid, increased almost linearly from -2 day until +1 day. There is an inverse relationship between the concentration of phospholipid in the fetal lung supernatant and the degree of lipid stimulation. Chromatographic experiments with Biogel A 1.5 columns have shown that cytidylyltransferase can exist in two molecular sizes, a small molecular size that requires phospholipid for activity, and a larger molecular weight species which does not require the addition of phospholipid for activity. Fetal lung has a higher proportion of the low molecular weight form than adult lung. The small molecular weight species can be converted to the larger molecular weight form by the addition of phospholipids.  相似文献   

10.
Experiments were performed to localize the hepatic microsomal enzymes of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and triacylglycerol biosynthesis to the cytoplasmic or lumenal surface of microsomal vesicles. Greater than 90 percent of the activities of fatty acid-CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3), sn-glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.15), lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.20), diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2), and diacylglycerol ethanolaminephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.1) was inactivated by proteolysis of intact microsomal vesicles. The phosphatidic acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.4) was not inactivated by any of the protease tested. Under conditions employed, <5 percent of the luminal mannose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) activity was lost. After microsomal integrity was disrupted with detergents, protease treatment resulted in a loss of >74 percent of the mannose-6-phosphatase activity. The latency of the mannose-6-phosphatase activity was not affected by protease treatment. Mannose-6-phosphatase latency was not decreased by the presence of the assay components of several of the lipid biosynthetic activities, indicating that those components did not disrupt the microsomal vesicles. None of the lipid biosynthetic activities appeared latent. The presence of a protease-sensitive component of these biosynthetic activities on the cytoplasmic surface of microsomal vesicles, and the absence of latency for any of these biosynthetic activities suggest that the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and triacylglycerol occurs asymmetrically on the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum. The location of biosynthetic activities within the transverse plane of the endoplasmic reticulum is of particular interest for enzymes whose products may be either secreted or retained within the cell. Phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and triacylglycerol account for the vast majority of hepatic glycerolipid biosynthesis. The phospholipids are utilized for hepatic membrane biogenesis and for the formation of lipoproteins, and the triacylglycerols are incorporated into lipoproteins or accumulate within the hepatocyte in certain disease states (14). The enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis of these glycerolipids (Scheme I) from fatty acids and glycerol-3P have all been localized to the microsomal subcellular fraction (12, 16, 29, 30). Microsomes are derived from the endoplasmic reticulum and are sealed vesicles which maintain proper sidedness. (11, 22). The external surface of these vesicles corresponds to the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum. Macromolecules destined for secretion must pass into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (5, 23). Uncharged molecules of up to approximately 600 daltons are able to enter the lumen of rat liver microsomes, but macromolecules and charged molecules of low molecular weight do not cross the vesicle membrane (10, 11). Because proteases neither cross the microsomal membrane nor destroy the permeability barrier of the microsomal vesicles, only the enzymes and proteins located on the cytoplasmic surface of microsomal vesicles are susceptible to proteolysis unless membrane integrity is disrupted (10, 11). By use of this approach, several enzymes and proteins have been localized in the transverse plane of microsomal membranes (11). With the possible exception of cytochrome P 450, all of the enzymes and proteins investigated were localized asymmetrically by the proteolysis technique (11). By studies of this type, as well as by product localization, glucose-6-phosphate (EC 3.1.3.9) has been localized to the luminal surface of microsomal vesicles (11) and of the endoplasmic reticulum (18, 19). All microsomal vesicles contain glucose-6-phosphatase (18, 19) which can effectively utilize mannose-6-P as a substrate, provided the permeability barrier of the vesicles has been disrupted to allow the substrate access to the active site located on the lumenal surface (4). An exact correspondence between mannose- 6-phosphate activity and membrane permeability to EDTA has been established (4). The latency of mannose-6-phosphatase activity provides a quantitative index of microsomal integrity (4.) Few of the microsomal enzymes in the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and triacylglycerol have been solubilized and/or purified, and little is known about the topography of these enzymes in the transverse or lateral planes of the endoplasmic reticulum. An asymmetric location of these biosynthetic enzymes on the cytoplasmic or lumenal surface of microsomal vesicles may provide a mechanism for regulation of the glycerolipids to be retained or secreted by the cell, and for the biogenesis of asymmetric phospholipid bilayers. In this paper, we report investigations on the localization of all seven microsomal enzymes (Scheme I) in the biosynthesis of triacylglycerol, phosphatidylcholine, and phosphatidylethanolamine, using the protease technique with mannose-6-phosphatase serving as luminal control activity. The latency of these lipid biosynthetic enzymes was also investigated, using the latency of mannose-6-phosphatase as an index of microsomal integrity.  相似文献   

11.
Chlorpromazine (25 microM) and trifluoperazine (25 microM) inhibited by 5-fold the activity of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase, the rate-limiting enzyme for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis, in rat liver cytosol. Addition of saturating amounts of rat liver phospholipid to the enzyme assay rapidly reversed the drug-mediated inhibition. Three-fold or greater concentrations of these drugs were required to produce a 50% inhibition of the microsomal cytidylyltransferase. Incubation of rat hepatocytes with 20 microM trifluoperazine or chlorpromazine did not inhibit phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. These results provide additional evidence for the hypothesis that the active form of cytidylyltransferase is on the endoplasmic reticulum and the enzyme in cytosol appears to be latent.  相似文献   

12.
Biosynthesis of phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane has been investigated. The results show that sarcoplasmic reticulum, in addition to its main function, i.e. transport and accumulation of Ca2+, is able to synthetize phospholipids by the same pathways as endoplasmic reticulum of other tissues. The changes of activity of enzymes involved in phospholipid biosynthesis during muscle development have been analysed. The extent of sn-glycero-3-phosphate and lysophosphatidylcholine acylation by acyl-CoA or free fatty acids in the presence of ATP and CoA is the same at every stage of development. The specific activity of glycerolphosphate acyltransferase(s) increases progressively during development up to about the 10th day of postnatal life and then decreases to the adult level. Linoleate esterifies sn-glycero-3-phosphate to a higher extent than palmitate, especially during postnatal period. The main product of sn-glycero-3-phosphate acylation is phosphatidic acid. The specific activity of lysolecithin acyltransferase increases from the embryonic period to a maximum between the 4th and the 9th day of postnatal life followed by a decrease to the adult value. the low embryonic value to a maximum at about the 3rd day of postnatal life, followed by a decrease to the adult value. The activity of cholinephosphotransferase decreases from a high value observed during the earliest embryonic period studied until the 3rd day before birth, and then begins to increase again from about the 5th day of postnatal life. The activity of ethanolaminephosphotransferase decreases continuously with age. The main product of phosphatidylethanolamine methylation is phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine. The specific activity of phosphatidylethanolamine methyltransferase increases from  相似文献   

13.
Radiolabeled phosphatidate and diglyceride were prepared bound to rat liver microsomes. These compounds were used as substrates in studies of diglyceride acyltransferase, cholinephosphotransferase, and CTP:phosphatidic acid cytidylyltransferase. Optimum incubation conditions for these reactions in microsomes from normal male rats are described. High fructose diets were fed to rats for 11 days; this resulted in an increased rate of neutral lipid formation from sn-glycerol-3-phosphate by liver microsomal preparations. This was attributed, in part, to a previously reported increase in liver phosphatidate phosphatase activity. The significance of this increase is supported by the finding of a fall in microsomal phosphatidate content and a doubling in microsomal diglyceride. In addition, diglyceride acyltransferase measured with microsomal-bound diglyceride was increased twofold with no equivalent change in cholinephosphotransferase activity. Such a change should result in preferential triglyceride formation from the increased microsomal diglyceride pool. CTP:phosphatidic acid cytidylytransferase activity was depressed by the high fructose diet. These combined alterations would lead to an accelerated hepatic triglyceride formation, a result found in vivo during high fructose feeding. The high fructose diet decreased slightly the total microsomal phospholipid content and markedly depressed phosphatidylethanolamine levels.  相似文献   

14.
The subcellular localization of the membrane-associated CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase was determined in Chinese hamster ovary cells in which the phospholipid composition had been altered by growth in the presence of N-methylethanolamine or treatment with phospholipase C. Cell homogenates were fractionated on Percoll density gradients, and marker enzyme activities were used to determine the location of the cellular membrane fractions. The peak of cytidylyltransferase activity occurred in the gradient at a density intermediate to that of the peaks of endoplasmic reticulum and plasma membrane markers. The profile of cytidylyltransferase activity most closely resembled that of the Golgi membrane marker; however, upon sucrose gradient centrifugation, the profile of the Golgi apparatus was very different from that of cytidylyltransferase. Differential centrifugation suggested a nuclear membrane association of the enzyme. Cytidylyltransferase was associated with a membrane fraction that sedimented when subjected to very low speed centrifugation (65 x g, 5 min). From Percoll gradient fractions, nuclei were identified by microscopy, and they migrated with cytidylyltransferase activity. The data are consistent with a localization of cytidylyltransferase in the nuclear membrane.  相似文献   

15.
The choline-deficient rat liver has been chosen as a physiologically relevant model system in which to study the regulation of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. When 50-g rats were placed on a choline-deficient diet for 3 days, the activity of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CT) was increased 2-fold in the microsomes and decreased proportionately in the cytosol. A low titer antibody to CT was obtained from chickens and used to identify the amount of CT protein in cytosol from rat liver. The amount of CT recovered from the choline-deficient cytosol was significantly less than in cytosol from choline-supplemented rats. When hepatocytes were prepared from choline-deficient livers, supplementation of the medium of the cells with choline caused CT to move from the membranes to cytosol within 1-2 h. The activity of another translocatable enzyme of glycerolipid metabolism, phosphatidate phosphohydrolase, was unchanged in cytosol from choline-deficient rat livers, and the microsomal activity of this enzyme was only minimally increased. When the livers were fractionated into endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi, there was a 2-fold increase in the activity on the endoplasmic reticulum from choline-deficient livers but no change in activity associated with Golgi. Thus, the increased association of CT with endoplasmic reticulum in choline-deficient livers appears to be specific to that subcellular fraction, and the subcellular location of other enzymes may not be affected.  相似文献   

16.
After a 3-h incubation of Krebs II ascitic cells in the presence of phospholipase C from Clostridium welchii under nonlytic conditions, the incorporation of [3H] choline into phosphatidylcholine was increased 1.7-fold as compared to untreated cells. The total amounts of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and sphingomyelin were unchanged up to 3 h of incubation. The limiting step in phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis was the formation of CDP-choline catalyzed by CTP:choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.15) as monitored by the decrease in phosphocholine labeling following phospholipase C treatment of cells prelabeled with [3H]choline. The specific activity of homogenate cytidylyltransferase was increased about 1.6-fold in phospholipase C-treated cells. Specific activity of the membrane fraction was increased 2-fold, whereas cytosolic specific activity decreased in phospholipase C-treated cells. The activation of cytidylyltransferase was concomitant with translocation of the enzyme from the cytosol to the membrane fraction. The latter was further fractionated using a Percoll gradient that allowed an efficient separation between endoplasmic reticulum and other subcellular membranes. In control cells, particulate cytidylyltransferase activity co-migrated with the endoplasmic reticulum and ribosome markers and not with the plasma membrane. Also, in treated cells, the stimulation of cytidylyltransferase activity occurred at the endoplasmic reticulum level and did not involve either the external cell membrane or other cellular organelles including the Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, or mitochondria. Thus, our results demonstrate that a stimulus acting on the plasma membrane promotes the translocation of the soluble form of cytidylyltransferase specifically to the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

17.
The topography of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and triacylglycerol biosynthetic enzymes within the transverse plane of rat liver microsomes was investigated using two impermeant inhibitors, mercury-dextran and dextran-maleimide. Between 70 and 98% of the activities of fatty acid : CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3), sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.15), phosphatidic acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.4), diacylglycerol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.20), diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2) and diacylglycerol ethanolaminephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.1) were inactivated by mercury-dextran. Dextran-maleimide caused 52% inactivation of the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase. Inactivation of each of these activities except fatty acid : CoA ligase occurred in microsomal vesicles which remained intact as evidenced by the maintenance of highly latent mannose-6-phosphatase activity (EC 3.1.3.9). These glycerolipid biosynthetic activities were not latent, indicating that substrates have free access to the active sites. Moreover, ATP, CDP-choline and CMP appeared unable to penetrate the microsome membrane. These data indicate that the active sites of these enzymes are located on the external surface of microsomal vesicles.It is concluded that the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and triacylglycerol occurs asymmetrically on the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

18.
Cardiac microsomes represent a heterogeneous fraction which contains mitochondrial, plasma membrane and lysosomal enzymes in addition to markers believed to originate in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The exact composition of this fraction depends on the method of preparation in that prolonged homogenization of ventricular myocardium increases both the yield of microsomal protein and the proportion of the mitochondrial contaminant.

Ultracentrifugation of cardiac microsomes on density gradients made with sucrose alone is of limited value in isolating fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum. Because of aggregation of the microsomes, zonal ultracentrifugation in sucrose permits isolation of material with only slight enhancement in the activity of markers for the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In the presence of LiBr, used under conditions which inhibit the damaging effects of this salt on the activities studied, aggregation of the microsomal fraction is reduced and density gradient fractionation is more effective.

The fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum prepared by zonal centrifugation in 0.5 M LiBr contains less than 1/5 the level of mitochondrial enzymes found in the original microsomes while the rate of Ca2+ uptake is enhanced 2-fold and the extent of Ca2+ uptake is enhanced 4-fold over that in the crude microsomal fraction. The sarcoplasmic reticulum markers were concentrated in a region of the gradient containing approx. 5% of the original protein that did not correspond to an obvious protein peak.  相似文献   


19.
The purpose of these studies was to determine the properties of the membrane-bound cytidylyltransferase in adult lung and to assess the relationship between the microsomal enzyme and the two forms of cytidylyltransferase in cytosol. Microsomes, isolated by glycerol density centrifugation, contained significantly less cytidylyltransferase than microsomes isolated by differential centrifugation (11.6 +/- 3.2 vs. 30 +/- 11 nmol/min per g lung). The released activity was recovered as H-form cytidylyltransferase. Cytidylyltransferase activity was not removed from microsomes by washing of the microsomal pellet with homogenizing buffer. Triton X 100 extracted all of the cytidylyltransferase from microsomes. The extracted activity was similar to H-form. Chlorpromazine dissociated microsomal enzyme to L-form. Chlorpromazine has been shown previously to dissociate H-form to L-form. These results suggested that microsomal cytidylyltransferase existed in a form similar if not identical to cytosolic H-form. In vitro translocation experiments demonstrated that the L-form of cytidylyltransferase was the species which binds to microsomal membranes. Triton X 100 extraction of microsomes from translocations experiments removed the bound enzyme activity. Glycerol density fractionation indicated that the activity in the Triton extract was H-form cytidylyltransferase. We concluded that the active lipoprotein form of cytidylyltransferase (H-form) is the membrane-associated form of cytidylyltransferase in adult lung; that it is formed after the L-form binds to microsomal membranes and that cytosolic H-form is released from the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
A new method for isolating transverse tubule membranes from rabbit skeletal muscle has been developed. This procedure has the advantage of being mild, fast, and producing with good yields a purified membrane fraction. The transverse tubule membranes are purified by a discontinuous sucrose density centrifugation after loading contaminating light sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles with calcium phosphate in the presence of ATP. Immunofluorescence staining of cryostat sections of rabbit psoas muscle with purified goat antibodies directed against the purified membranes shows that the reacting antigens are distributed at the boundary of the A and I bands of the myofibrils where transverse tubules are localized in mammalian muscle. The purified antibodies showed no cross-reactivity with sarcoplasmic reticulum, nor did they show any fluorescence staining of the muscle plasma membrane, indicating that the isolated membranes indeed originate from the transverse tubules. The transverse tubule fraction has a characteristic protein composition distinguishable from that of sarcoplasmic reticulum, a much higher cholesterol content than that of the crude microsomes, plasma membrane, and sarcoplasmic reticulum, and a phospholipid content about twice as high as that of sarcoplasmic reticulum and plasma membrane. The purified transverse tubule membrane has a distinct phospholipid composition with high contents of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylserine. A Mg2+-activated ATPase characteristic of the transverse tubule fraction undergoes a 20-30-fold increase in specific activity during purification. The levels of Ca2+-ATPase activity present in the purified transverse tubule fraction remain comparable to those of sarcoplasmic reticulum even after extensive removal of the latter.  相似文献   

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