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1.
The transfer of phospholipids across membrane bilayers is protein-mediated, and most of the established transporters catalyze the energy-dependent efflux of phospholipids from cells. This work identifies and characterizes a lysophospholipid transporter gene (lplT, formally ygeD) in Escherichia coli that is an integral component in the 2-acylglycerophosphoethanolamine (2-acyl-GPE) metabolic cycle for membrane protein acylation. The lplT gene is adjacent to and in the same operon as the aas gene, which encodes the bifunctional enzyme 2-acyl-GPE acyltransferase/acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase. In some bacteria, acyltransferase/acyl-ACP synthetase (Aas) and LplT homologues are fused in a single polypeptide chain. 2-Acyl-GPE transport to the inside of the cell was assessed by measuring the Aas-dependent formation of phosphatidylethanolamine. The Aas-dependent incorporation of [3H]palmitate into phosphatidylethanolamine was significantly diminished in deltalplT mutants, and the LplT-Aas transport/acylation activity was independent of the proton motive force. The deltalplT mutants accumulated acyl-GPE in vivo and had a diminished capacity to transport exogenous 2-acylglycerophosphocholine into the cell. Spheroplasts prepared from wild-type E. coli transported and acylated fluorescent 2-acyl-GPE with an apparent K(d) of 7.5 microM, whereas this high-affinity process was absent in deltalplT mutants. Thus, LplT catalyzes the transbilayer movement of lysophospholipids and is the first example of a phospholipid flippase that belongs to the major facilitator superfamily.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Two enzymatic activities, 2-acylglycerolphosphoethanolamine (2-acyl-GPE) acyltransferase and acyl-acyl carrier protein (acyl-ACP) synthetase, were solubilized and purified from Escherichia coli membranes. Electrophoretic analysis of the final product of the purification procedure revealed a single protein species with an apparent molecular mass of 27 kilodaltons. The ratio of acyltransferase to synthetase activities remained the same throughout the purification scheme indicating that both activities were catalyzed by the same enzyme. 2-Acyl-GPE acyltransferase exhibited an apparent ACP Km of 64 nM under standard assay conditions that increased to 10 microM when the assay was conducted in the presence of 0.4 M LiCl. Acyl-ACP synthetase activity was not detected in the absence of 0.4 M LiCl, and the apparent ACP Km for this reaction was 16 microM. Direct evidence that ACP was a subunit of the acyltransferase/synthetase was obtained by the adsorption of both catalytic activities to an ACP-Sepharose affinity column and by the binding of [3H]ACP to the purified enzyme preparation. The apparent Km for acyl-ACP was 13 microM, and the rate of acyl transfer from this acyl donor was enhanced by the addition of 0.4 M LiCl indicating that the exchange of enzyme-bound ACP for acyl-ACP was a determinant factor in the rate of phosphatidylethanolamine formation from acyl-ACP. These data indicate that the 2-acyl-GPE acyltransferase and acyl-ACP synthetase reactions are catalyzed by the same membrane protein that possesses a high affinity binding site for soluble ACP.  相似文献   

4.
Two distinct pathways for the incorporation of exogenous fatty acids into phospholipids were identified in Escherichia coli. The predominant route originates with the activation of fatty acids by acyl-CoA synthetase followed by the distribution of the acyl moieties into all phospholipid classes via the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase reaction. This pathway was blocked in mutants (fadD) lacking acyl-CoA synthetase activity. In fadD strains, exogenous fatty acids were introduced exclusively into the 1-position of phosphatidylethanolamine. This secondary route is related to 1-position fatty acid turnover in phosphatidylethanolamine and proceeds via the acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase/2-acylglycerophosphoethanolamine acyltransferase system. The turnover pathway exhibited a preference for saturated fatty acids, whereas the acyl-CoA synthetase-dependent pathway was less discriminating. Both pathways were inhibited in mutants (fadL) lacking the fatty acid permease, demonstrating that the fadL gene product translocates exogenous fatty acids to an intracellular pool accessible to both synthetases. These data demonstrate that acyl-CoA synthetase is not required for fatty acid transport in E. coli and that the metabolism of exogenous fatty acids is segregated from the metabolism of acyl-acyl carrier proteins derived from fatty acid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

5.
plsX (acyl-acyl carrier protein [ACP]:phosphate acyltransferase), plsY (yneS) (acyl-phosphate:glycerol-phosphate acyltransferase), and plsC (yhdO) (acyl-ACP:1-acylglycerol-phosphate acyltransferase) function in phosphatidic acid formation, the precursor to membrane phospholipids. The physiological functions of these genes was inferred from their in vitro biochemical activities, and this study investigated their roles in gram-positive phospholipid metabolism through the analysis of conditional knockout strains in the Bacillus subtilis model system. The depletion of PlsX led to the cessation of both fatty acid synthesis and phospholipid synthesis. The inactivation of PlsY also blocked phospholipid synthesis, but fatty acid formation continued due to the appearance of acylphosphate intermediates and fatty acids arising from their hydrolysis. Phospholipid synthesis ceased following PlsC depletion, but fatty acid synthesis continued at a high rate, leading to the accumulation of fatty acids arising from the dephosphorylation of 1-acylglycerol-3-P followed by the deacylation of monoacylglycerol. Analysis of glycerol 3-P acylation in B. subtilis membranes showed that PlsY was an acylphosphate-specific acyltransferase, whereas PlsC used only acyl-ACP as an acyl donor. PlsX was found in the soluble fraction of disrupted cells but was associated with the cell membrane in intact organisms. These data establish that PlsX is a key enzyme that coordinates the production of fatty acids and membrane phospholipids in B. subtilis.  相似文献   

6.
The obligate intracellular parasite Chlamydia trachomatis has a reduced genome but relies on de novo fatty acid and phospholipid biosynthesis to produce its membrane phospholipids. Lipidomic analyses showed that 8% of the phospholipid molecular species synthesized by C. trachomatis contained oleic acid, an abundant host fatty acid that cannot be made by the bacterium. Mass tracing experiments showed that isotopically labeled palmitic, myristic, and lauric acids added to the medium were incorporated into C. trachomatis-derived phospholipid molecular species. HeLa cells did not elongate lauric acid, but infected HeLa cell cultures elongated laurate to myristate and palmitate. The elongated fatty acids were incorporated exclusively into C. trachomatis-produced phospholipid molecular species. C. trachomatis has adjacent genes encoding the separate domains of the bifunctional acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthetase/2-acylglycerolphosphoethanolamine acyltransferase gene (aas) of Escherichia coli. The CT775 gene encodes an acyltransferase (LpaT) that selectively transfers fatty acids from acyl-ACP to the 1-position of 2-acyl-glycerophospholipids. The CT776 gene encodes an acyl-ACP synthetase (AasC) with a substrate preference for palmitic compared with oleic acid in vitro. Exogenous fatty acids were elongated and incorporated into phospholipids by Escherichia coli-expressing AasC, illustrating its function as an acyl-ACP synthetase in vivo. These data point to an AasC-dependent pathway in C. trachomatis that selectively scavenges host saturated fatty acids to be used for the de novo synthesis of its membrane constituents.  相似文献   

7.
The activities of three acylation systems for 1-alkenylglycerophosphoethanolamine (1-alkenyl-GPE), 1-acyl-GPE and 1-acylglycerophosphocholine (1-acyl-GPC) were compared in rat brain microsomes and the acyl selectivity of each system was clarified. The rate of CoA-independent transacylation of 1-[3H]alkenyl-GPE (approx. 4.5 nmol/10 min per mg protein) was about twice as high as in the case of 1-[3H]acyl-GPE and 1-[14C]acyl-GPC. On the other hand, the rates of CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation (acylation of free fatty acids by acyl-CoA synthetase and acyl-CoA acyltransferase) of lysophospholipids were in the order 1-acyl-GPC greater than 1-acyl-GPE much greater than 1-alkenyl-GPE. HPLC analysis of newly synthesized molecular species revealed that the CoA-independent transacylation system exclusively esterified docosahexaenoate and arachidonate, regardless of the lysophospholipid class. The CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation systems were almost the same with respect to the selectivities for unsaturated fatty acids when the same acceptor lysophospholipid was used, but some distinctive acyl selectivities were observed with different acceptor lysophospholipids. 1-Alkenyl-GPE selectively acquired only oleate in these two systems. 1-Acyl-GPE and 1-acyl-GPC showed selectivities for both arachidonate and oleate. In addition, an appreciable amount of palmitate was transferred to 1-acyl-GPC, not to 1-acyl-GPE, in CoA- or CoA + ATP-dependent manner. The acylation of exogenously added acyl-CoA revealed that the acyl selectivities of the CoA-dependent transacylation and CoA + ATP-dependent acylation systems may be mainly governed through the selective action of acyl-CoA acyltransferase. The preferential utilization of oleoyl-CoA by all acceptors and the different utilization of arachidonoyl-CoA between alkenyl and acyllysophospholipids indicated that there might be two distinct acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferases that discriminate between oleoyl-CoA and arachidonoyl-CoA, respectively. Our present results clearly show that all three microsomal acylation systems can be active in the reacylation of three major brain glycerophospholipids and that the higher contribution of the CoA-independent system in the reacylation of ethanolamine glycerophospholipids, especially alkenylacyl-GPE, may tend to enrich docosahexaenoate in these phospholipids, as compared with in the case of diacyl-GPC.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Investigations were performed on the influence of the phospholipid composition and physicochemical properties of the rat liver microsomal membranes on acyl-CoA synthetase and acyl-CoA : 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine O-acyltransferase activities. The phospholipid composition of the membranes was modified by incubation with different phospholipids in the presence of lipid transfer proteins or by partial delipidation with exogenous phospholipase C and subsequent enrichment with phospholipids. The results indicated that the incorporation of phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine induced a marked activation of acyl-CoA synthetase for both substrates used—palmitic and oleic acids. Sphingomyelin occurred as specific inhibitor for this activity especially for palmitic acid. Palmitoyl-CoA: and oleoyl-CoA : lacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine acyltransferase activities were found to depend on the physical state of the membrane lipids. The alterations in the membrane physical state were estimated using two different fluorescent probes—1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene and pyrene. In all cases of membrane fluidization this activity was elevated. On the contrary, in more rigid membranes obtained by incorporation of sphingomyelin and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, acyltransferase activity was reduced for both palmitoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA. We suggest a certain similarity in the way of regulation of membrane-bound acyltransferase and phospholipase A2 which both participate in the deacylation-reacylation cycle.  相似文献   

9.
Growth of a temperature-sensitive general fatty acid synthesis mutant of Escherichia coli K12 at its restrictive temperature in the presence of exogenous palmitate results in lysis of the bacterium. Under these conditions, palmitate is incorporated into membrane phospholipid to a high level. Mutants of bacteria restricting this incorporation (having a palmitate-resistant phenotype) have been isolated and one such mutant, strain L8-2/3, has been further characterized. This mutant has lowered acyl-CoA synthetase (fadD) activity (25-33% of normal) and consequently is defective in fatty acid uptake. This lowered uptake could explain the palmitate-resistant phenotype of strain L8-2/3. However, both in vivo (fatty acid composition and positional distribution data) and in vitro (acyltransferase activity measurements) experiments suggest that this mutant is also altered in its acyltransferase activities. The mutation(s) of strain L8-2/3 appears to allow increased (approximately 2-fold) incorporation of myristate (and possible unsaturated fatty acids) into position 2 of 1-acyl-sn-glycerol 3-phosphate but normal palmitate incorporation into the same position. The incorporation of palmitate, myristate, and oleate into position 1 of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate by strain L8-2/3 is also higher than that observed with the parent, strain L8-2. Replacing the partially defective fadD gene of strain L8-2/3 with a wild type allele conferred on this strain the palmitate sensitivity and the acyltransferase activity of the parent strain L8-2. This finding, taken together with other data, suggests that acyl-CoA synthetase interacts with the acyltransferase(s) in some manner to influence the fatty acid specificity of the acyltransferase.  相似文献   

10.
Phospholipid biosynthesis is a vital facet of bacterial physiology that begins with the synthesis of the fatty acids by a soluble type II fatty acid synthase. The bacterial glycerol-phosphate acyltransferases utilize the completed fatty acid chains to form the first membrane phospholipid and thus play a critical role in the regulation of membrane biogenesis. The first bacterial acyltransferase described was PlsB, a glycerol-phosphate acyltransferase. PlsB is a key regulatory point that coordinates membrane phospholipid formation with cell growth and macromolecular synthesis. Phosphatidic acid is then produced by PlsC, a 1-acylglycerol-phosphate acyltransferase. These two acyltransferases use thioesters of either CoA or acyl carrier protein (ACP) as the acyl donors and have homologs that perform the same reactions in higher organisms. However, the most prevalent glycerol-phosphate acyltransferase in the bacterial world is PlsY, which uses a recently discovered acyl-phosphate fatty acid intermediate as an acyl donor. This unique activated fatty acid is formed from the acyl-ACP end products of the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway by PlsX, an acyl-ACP:phosphate transacylase.  相似文献   

11.
Coenzyme A-dependent transacylation system in rabbit liver microsomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The activities of cofactor-independent and CoA-dependent transacylation were examined for various rabbit tissues. Liver microsomes were found to exhibit relatively high CoA-dependent transacylation activity, while the cofactor-independent transacylation activity was low. The apparent Km values for CoA were 1.4 microM (acceptor, 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (1-acyl-GPC] and 3.8 microM (acceptor, 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (1-acyl-GPE], respectively. The apparent Vmax values were 2.6 nmol/min/mg (1-acyl-GPC) and 1.2 nmol/min/mg (1-acyl-GPE), respectively. The CoA-dependent transacylation reaction shows a distinct fatty acid specificity. [14C]18:2 and [14C]20:4 at the 2-positions and [14C]18:0 at the 1-positions of donor phospholipids were transferred to lysophospholipids in the presence of CoA. We observed the formation of considerable amounts of acyl-CoA from these fatty acids during the reaction, without the participation of ATP. The transfer of other fatty acids between phospholipids was shown to be almost nil. The very low transfer of 18:1 was in marked contrast to the effective utilization of 18:1-CoA by acyl-CoA:1-acyl-GPC acyltransferase. The effects of several compounds and heat treatment on these two acylation reactions were also examined. The CoA-dependent transacylation reaction may be important for the selective acylation of certain lysophospholipids, such as 1-acyl-GPE, in living cells with the cooperation of acyl-CoA:lysophospholipid acyltransferase, which generates CoA for the former reaction.  相似文献   

12.
In situ incorporation of two saturated (palmitic, 16:0; stearic, 18:0) and three unsaturated fatty acids (oleic, 18:1; linoleic, 18:2; arachidonic, 20:4) into the four major phospholipids, sphingomyelin, PC, PI and PE, was followed. Transformed cells incorporated unsaturated fatty acids more rapidly, whereas no significant differences were found concerning saturated fatty acids. In vitro determination of phospholipid acylation showed that incorporation of coenzyme A-activated forms of two saturated fatty acids (16:0 and 18:0) and one unsaturated fatty acid (18:1) into phospholipids was increased in transformed cells. Comparison of results obtained in situ and in vitro strongly suggests that incorporation of fatty acids into phospholipids in cultured cells is not limited by acyltransferase activities.  相似文献   

13.
Jiang Y  Chan CH  Cronan JE 《Biochemistry》2006,45(33):10008-10019
The gene encoding the unique soluble acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (AasS) of the bioluminescent Vibrio harveyi strain B392 has been isolated by expression cloning in Escherichia coli.This enzyme catalyzes the ATP-dependent acylation of the thiol of acyl carrier protein (ACP) with fatty acids with chain lengths from C4 to C18. The gene (called aasS) encodes a protein of 60 kDa, a hexahistidine-tagged version of which was readily expressed in E. coli and purified in large quantities. Surprisingly, the sequence of the encoded protein was significantly more similar to that of an acyl-CoA synthetase of the distantly related bacterium, Thermus thermophilus, than to that of the membrane-bound acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase of E. coli, an enzyme that catalyzes the same reaction from a more closely related organism. Indeed, the AasS sequence can readily be modeled on the known crystal structures of the T. thermophilus acyl-CoA synthetase with remarkably high levels of conservation of the catalytic site residues. To test the possible role of AasS in the fatty aldehyde-dependent bioluminescence pathway of V. harveyi, the chromosomal aasS gene of the organism was disrupted by insertion of a kanamycin cassette by homologous recombination. The resulting aasS::kan strains retained low levels of acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase consistent with prior indications of a second such activity in this bacterium. The mutant strains grew normally and had normal levels of bioluminescence but were deficient in the incorporation of exogenous octanoic acid into the cellular phospholipids of V. harveyi, particularly at low octanoate concentrations. These data indicate that AasS is responsible for a high-affinity and high-capacity uptake system that efficiently converts exogenous fatty acids into acyl-ACP species competent to enter the fatty acid biosynthetic cycle.  相似文献   

14.
As phylogenetic ancestors of plant chloroplasts cyanobacteria resemble plastids with respect to lipid and fatty acid composition. These membrane lipids show the typical prokaryotic fatty acid pattern in which the sn-2 position is exclusively esterified by C(16) acyl groups. In the course of de novo glycerolipid biosynthesis this prokaryotic fatty acid pattern is established by the sequential acylation of glycerol-3-phosphate with acyl-ACPs by the activity of different acyltransferases. In silico approaches allowed the identification of putative Synechocystis acyltransferases involved in glycerolipid metabolism. Functional expression studies in Escherichia coli showed that sll1848 codes for a lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase with a high specificity for 16:0-ACP, whereas slr2060 encodes a lysophospholipid acyltransferase, with a broad acyl-ACP specificity but a strong preference for lysophosphatidyglycerol especially its sn-2 acyl isomer as acyl-acceptor. The generation and analysis of the corresponding Synechocystis knockout mutants revealed that lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase unlike the lysophospholipid acyltransferase is essential for the vital functions of the cells.  相似文献   

15.
The membrane localization and properties of the Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase have been examined utilizing enzymatically prepared acyl-acyl carrier protein (acyl-ACP) substrates as acyl donors for sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acylation. Studies conducted with membranes prepared from chemotrophically and phototrophically grown cells show that sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity is predominantly (greater than 80%) associated with the cell's cytoplasmic membrane. Enzyme activity associated with the intracytoplasmic membranes present in phototrophically grown R. sphaeroides was within the range attributable to cytoplasmic membrane contamination of this membrane fraction. Enzyme activity was optimal at 40 degrees C and pH 7.0 to 7.5, and required the presence of magnesium. No enzyme activity was observed with any of the long-chain acyl-CoA substrates examined. Vaccenoyl-ACP was the preferred acyl-ACP substrate and vaccenoyl-ACP and palmitoyl-ACP were independently utilized to produce lysophosphatidic and phosphatidic acids. With either vaccenoyl-ACP or palmitoyl-ACP as sole acyl donor substrate, the lysophosphatidic acid formed was primarily 1-acylglycerol-3-phosphate and the Km(app) for sn-glycerol-3-phosphate utilization was 96 microM. The implications of these results to the mode and regulation of phospholipid synthesis in R. sphaeroides are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
M F Schmidt 《The EMBO journal》1984,3(10):2295-2300
[3H]Myristic and [3H]palmitic acid were compared as tracers for the fatty acylation of cellular lipids and viral glycoproteins in chicken embryo cells infected with fowl plague and Semliki Forest virus (SFV). Both of these substrates are incorporated into glycerolipids to a similar extent, whereas sphingolipids show much higher levels of palmitate than myristate after a 20 h labeling period. Both fatty acid species were found to be subject to metabolic conversions into longer chain fatty acids yielding 11.7% C16:0 from [3H]myristic and 11.8% C18:0 from [3H]palmitic acid. The reverse, a metabolic shortening of the exogenous acyl-chains yielding, for instance, significant levels of myristic acid from palmitic acid was not observed. Out of the various [3H]fatty acids present after in vivo labeling with [3H]myristic acid (C14:0) the elongated acyl-species arising from metabolic conversion (e.g., C16:0; C18:0) are preferred over myristic acid in the acylation of SFV E1 and E2 and of the influenza viral hemagglutinin (HA2). During acylation of exogenous E1 from SFV in vitro incorporation of palmitic acid from palmitoyl CoA exceeds that of myristic acid from myristoyl CoA by a factor of 37. This indicates that specificity for the incorporation of fatty acids into viral membrane proteins occurs at the level of the polypeptide acyltransferase(s).  相似文献   

17.
Phosphatidylethanolamine is the major membrane phospholipid of Escherichia coli, and two experimental approaches were used to investigate the metabolic activity of the fatty acids occupying the 1-position of this phospholipid. [3H]Acetate pulse-chase experiments with logarithmically growing cells indicated that 3-5% of the acyl groups were removed from the phosphatidylethanolamine pool/generation. The reacylation aspect of the turnover cycle was demonstrated by the incorporation of fatty acids into the 1-position of pre-existing phosphatidylethanolamine when de novo phospholipid biosynthesis was inhibited using the plsB acyltransferase mutant. 2- Acylglycerophosphoethanolamine would be the intermediate in a 1-position turnover cycle, and this lysophospholipid was identified as a membrane component that could re-esterified by a membrane-bound acyltransferase. The acyltransferase either utilized acyl-acyl carrier protein directly as an acyl donor or activated fatty acids for acyl transfer in the presence of ATP and Mg2+. Acyl-acyl carrier protein was also indicated as an intermediate in the latter reacylation reaction by the complete inhibition of phosphatidylethanolamine formation from fatty acids by acyl carrier protein-specific antibodies and by the observation that the inhibition of the acyltransferase by LiCl was reversed by the addition of acyl carrier protein. Coenzyme A thioesters were not substrates for this acyltransferase. These results suggest the existence of a metabolic cycle for the utilization of 1-position acyl moieties of phosphatidylethanolamine followed by the resynthesis of this membrane phospholipid from 2- acylglycerophosphoethanolamine by an acyl carrier protein-dependent 1-position acyltransferase.  相似文献   

18.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP), a small protein essential for bacterial growth and pathogenesis, interacts with diverse enzymes during the biosynthesis of fatty acids, phospholipids, and other specialized products such as lipid A. NMR and hydrodynamic studies have previously shown that divalent cations stabilize native helical ACP conformation by binding to conserved acidic residues at two sites (A and B) at either end of the "recognition" helix II. To examine the roles of these amino acids in ACP structure and function, site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace individual site A (Asp-30, Asp-35, Asp-38) and site B (Glu-47, Glu-53, Asp-56) residues in recombinant Vibrio harveyi ACP with the corresponding amides, along with combined mutations at each site (SA, SB) or both sites (SA/SB). Like native V. harveyi ACP, all individual mutants were unfolded at neutral pH but adopted a helical conformation in the presence of millimolar Mg(2+) or upon fatty acylation. Mg(2+) binding to sites A or B independently stabilized native ACP conformation, whereas mutant SA/SB was folded in the absence of Mg(2+), suggesting that charge neutralization is largely responsible for ACP stabilization by divalent cations. Asp-35 in site A was critical for holo-ACP synthase activity, while acyl-ACP synthetase and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine acyltransferase (LpxA) activities were more affected by mutations in site B. Both sites were required for fatty acid synthase activity. Overall, our results indicate that divalent cation binding site mutations have predicted effects on ACP conformation but unpredicted and variable consequences on ACP function with different enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Previous results have shown that acyl-CoA synthetase is required both for the incorporation of exogenous fatty acids into the phospholipids of E. coli and for the transport of fatty acids into the cell. We have demonstrated that acyl-CoA synthetase is not required for the incorporation of intracellular free fatty acids into phospholipid. This finding indicates that the role of this enzyme in the incorporation of exogenously supplied fatty acids is primarily at the level of fatty acid transport.  相似文献   

20.
Control of fatty acid distribution in phosphatidylcholine of spinach leaves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The acylation of lysophosphatidylcholine by enzyme preparations from spinach leaves was studied. The acylation reaction was followed by the incorporation of (14)C-labeled fatty acids from the respective coenzyme A derivatives into phosphatidylcholine. The subcellular fraction with the highest specific activity was the microsomal fraction. Contaminating thioesterase activity which was encountered was inhibited by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate. The acyltransferase activity was only mildly inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents. Labeled fatty acid was primarily incorporated into phosphatidylcholine. When saturated and unsaturated fatty acyl CoA derivatives were used, the saturated derivatives were incorporated primarily into the 1-position of the glycerol moiety, and the unsaturated fatty acids went primarily to the 2-position. This pattern of incorporation agrees with the fatty acid distribution in vivo.  相似文献   

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