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1.
The bacterium Xenorhabdus sp. is symbiotically associated with the entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema riobravis. This nematode is produced in monoxenic culture with Xenorhabdus sp. and is sold as a biological insecticide. Acceptable yields in fermentors can only be achieved in the presence of vigorous growth of the bacterium. We investigated the fatty acid composition of Xenorhabdus species when grown at 15, 20, 25 or 30 degrees C on media containing one of two primary carbon sources: glucose or lipids from the insect host, Galleria mellonella. Both temperature and primary carbon source significantly affected lipid quantity and quality in Xenorhabdus sp. Bacteria grown with insect lipids as a primary carbon source accumulated more lipids with greater proportion of longer chain fatty acids than bacteria grown with glucose as a primary carbon source. Cells grown with insect lipids at 15 degrees C had a lower lipid content than cells grown on the same media at 20, 25 or 30 degrees C. Increasing growth temperature increased saturated fatty acids and decreased unsaturated fatty acids, irrespective of carbon source. We recommend addition of complex fatty acid sources that resemble natural host lipids to growth medium for mass producing entomopathogenic nematodes. This could provide nematode quality similar to in vivo-produced nematodes.  相似文献   

2.
Lipids were extracted from cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa grown on a pure hydrocarbon (tridecane), mixed hydrocarbons (JP-4 jet fuel), and on Trypticase Soy Broth. Total lipids produced from each substrate represented from 7.1 to 8.2% of cellular dry weight, of which 5.0 to 6.4% were obtained before cellular hydrolysis (free lipids) and 1.7 to 2.0% were extracted after cellular hydrolysis (bound lipids). Free lipids from cells grown on each medium were separated into four fractions by thin-layer chromatography. All fractions were present in cells from each type of medium, and the "neutral fraction" constituted the largest fraction. The fatty acid composition of free lipids was determined by gas-liquid chromatography. Cells grown on each medium contained saturated and unsaturated C(14) to C(20) fatty acids. Trace amounts of C(13) fatty acids were found in tridecane-grown cells. Saturated C(16) and C(18) were the major acids present in all cells. Quantitative differences were found in fatty acids produced on the three media, but specific correlations between substrate carbon sources and fatty acid content of cells were not evident. Tridecane-grown cells contained only traces of C(13) acid and small amounts of C(15) and C(17) acids, suggesting that the organism's fatty acids were derived from de novo synthesis rather than by direct incorporation of the hydrocarbon.  相似文献   

3.
In media containing glucose, lactate stimulates the metabolism of gonococci at concentrations that simulate conditions in vivo. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of (13)C-labelled lipids obtained from gonococci grown in a synthetic medium with (13)C-labelled lactate and unlabelled glucose (culture A), (13)C-labelled glucose alone (culture B) or (13)C-labelled glucose and unlabelled lactate (culture C) showed lactate carbon was not present in glycerol/ethanolamine residues of lipids from culture A. This indicated that, in the presence of glucose, lactate gluconeogenesis is shut down. Hence, the stimulation of metabolism could result from the production of extra energy because lactate is used solely for conversion to acetyl-CoA, the precursor of fatty acid synthesis and the components of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In this paper, additional evidence for lack of gluconeogenesis has been sought using a different approach. The carbohydrate moieties of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) have been examined for lactate carbon after gonococci were grown with lactate and glucose. Two methods were used: NMR spectroscopy of (13)C-labelled lipopolysaccharide purified from the three cultures described above showed that, in the presence of glucose, lactate carbon, in contrast to glucose carbon, was not in the carbohydrate moiety. Also, (14)C-labelled lactate was added to a culture containing unlabelled glucose and lactate (culture A) and [(14)C]glucose to cultures containing unlabelled glucose without unlabelled lactate (culture B) and with unlabelled lactate (culture C). When LPS samples purified from these cultures were subjected to hydrazinolysis, the ratio of the radioactivity of water-soluble products (carbohydrate moieties) to those of chloroform-soluble products (fatty acids) was much lower when [(14)C]lactate was used in culture A, than when [(14)C]glucose was used in cultures B and C. Thus, in the presence of glucose, lactate carbon, unlike glucose carbon, is incorporated predominantly into fatty acids of LPS, not into its carbohydrate moieties. There is no doubt, therefore, that gluconeogenesis is shut off when lactate is present with glucose and there is a consequent stimulation of metabolism. This probably occurs in vivo on mucous surfaces, where gonococci are surrounded by a mixture of glucose and lactate in the secretions.  相似文献   

4.
The dominant Arctic Ocean and North Atlantic copepods Calanus hyperboreus, Calanus glacialis, and Calanus finmarchicus were collected in the Greenland Sea and fed 13C labelled diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii to follow the transfer and assimilation of carbon, lipid, and individual fatty acids and alcohols. The diatom was grown with 13C for 3 to 5 days and fed then to the copepods. During the feeding period of 14 days, total carbon increased in the copepodite stages V of C. hyperboreus and C. finmarchicus, whereas carbon remained almost constant in C. glacialis females. However, total lipid increased in all species and stages. Highest lipid accumulation occurred in C. hyperboreus in which nearly all lipids were exchanged already after 11 days of feeding. In the other species lipid accumulation made up between 22% (C. finmarchicus) and 45% of total lipid (C. glacialis). The proportion of wax esters was high ranging from 76% of total lipid in C. glacialis to 92% in C. finmarchicus. The fatty acid composition of the alga was dominated by 16:1(n-7), 16:0, 20:5(n-3), and 22:6(n-3). The composition of the copepods was similar because of feeding already on diatoms in the field. In addition, the monounsaturated fatty acids and alcohols, 20:1(n-9) and 22:1(n-11), were major components of the copepod lipids. During the feeding period the highest 13C labelling was always found in the C16 polyunsaturated fatty acids and in the 16:1(n-7) alcohol. Because these components occurred only in trace amounts in the copepods they totally originated from the diet explaining the high labelling. It is noteworthy that the 16:1(n-7) alcohol originated only from the corresponding dietary and not from the abundant internal fatty acid. The long-chain monounsaturated fatty acids and alcohols, 20:1(n-9) and 22:1(n-11), are not existent in phytoplankton and have to be produced de novo. They were less labelled in the smaller species but highly 13C enriched in C. hyperboreus. Although dietary fatty acids were generally retained by the copepods it seems that fatty acids or even lipids were selectively accumulated and turned over due to bodily requirements, and thus, essential polyunsaturated fatty acids were preferentially retained. During feeding mixing, accumulation, and exchange of internal and dietary fatty acids and alcohols occurred as well as utilisation of lipids from both sources for metabolic requirements. The differences in lipid assimilation fit to the different life strategies of the copepods.  相似文献   

5.
To assess the effects related to known and proposed biosynthetic pathways on the (13)C content of lipids and storage products of the photoautotrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, the isotopic compositions of bulk cell material, alkyl and isoprenoid lipids, and storage products such as glycogen and polyhydroxyalkanoic acids have been investigated. The bulk cell material was 13 per thousand depleted in (13)C relative to the dissolved inorganic carbon. Evidently, inorganic carbon fixation by the main carboxylating enzymes used by C. aurantiacus, which are assumed to use bicarbonate rather than CO(2), results in a relatively small carbon isotopic fractionation compared with CO(2) fixation by the Calvin cycle. Even carbon numbered fatty acids, odd carbon numbered fatty acids, and isoprenoid lipids were 14, 15, and 17-18 per thousand depleted in (13)C relative to the carbon source, respectively. Based on the (13)C contents of alkyl and isoprenoid lipids, a 40 per thousand difference in (13)C content between the carboxyl and methyl carbon from acetyl-coenzyme A has been calculated. Both sugars and polyhydroxyalkanoic acid were enriched in (13)C relative to the alkyl and isoprenoid lipids. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report in which the stable carbon isotopic composition of a large range of biosynthetic products in a photoautotrophic organism has been investigated and interpreted based on previously proposed inorganic carbon fixation and biosynthetic pathways. Our results indicate that compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis may provide a rapid screening tool for carbon fixation pathways.  相似文献   

6.
To assess the effects related to known and proposed biosynthetic pathways on the (13)C content of lipids and storage products of the photoautotrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, the isotopic compositions of bulk cell material, alkyl and isoprenoid lipids, and storage products such as glycogen and polyhydroxyalkanoic acids have been investigated. The bulk cell material was 13 per thousand depleted in (13)C relative to the dissolved inorganic carbon. Evidently, inorganic carbon fixation by the main carboxylating enzymes used by C. aurantiacus, which are assumed to use bicarbonate rather than CO(2), results in a relatively small carbon isotopic fractionation compared with CO(2) fixation by the Calvin cycle. Even carbon numbered fatty acids, odd carbon numbered fatty acids, and isoprenoid lipids were 14, 15, and 17-18 per thousand depleted in (13)C relative to the carbon source, respectively. Based on the (13)C contents of alkyl and isoprenoid lipids, a 40 per thousand difference in (13)C content between the carboxyl and methyl carbon from acetyl-coenzyme A has been calculated. Both sugars and polyhydroxyalkanoic acid were enriched in (13)C relative to the alkyl and isoprenoid lipids. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report in which the stable carbon isotopic composition of a large range of biosynthetic products in a photoautotrophic organism has been investigated and interpreted based on previously proposed inorganic carbon fixation and biosynthetic pathways. Our results indicate that compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis may provide a rapid screening tool for carbon fixation pathways.  相似文献   

7.
Ladderane lipids are unusual membrane lipids of bacteria that anaerobically oxidize ammonium to dinitrogen gas (anammox). Ladderane lipids contain linearly concatenated cyclobutane rings for which the pathway of biosynthesis is currently unknown. To investigate the possible biosynthetic routes of these lipids, 2-13C-labelled acetate was added to a culture of the anammox bacterium Candidatus Brocadia fulgida. Labelling patterns obtained by high-field 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of isolated lipids indicated that C . Brocadia fulgida synthesizes C16:0 and iso C16:0 fatty acids according to the known pathway of type II fatty acid biosynthesis. The 13C-labelling pattern of the C8 alkyl chain of the C20 [3] ladderane monoether also indicated the use of this route. However, carbon atoms in the cyclobutane rings and the cyclohexane ring were nonspecifically labelled and did not correspond to known patterns of fatty acid synthesis. Taken together, our results indicate that it is unlikely that ladderane lipids are formed from the cyclization of polyunsaturated fatty acids as hypothesized previously and suggest an alternative, although as yet unknown, pathway of biosynthesis.  相似文献   

8.
SYNOPSIS.
The fatty acids of whole cells and cilia from Paramecium tetraurelia strains 51s and d,95 and from Paramecium octaurelia strain 299s were identified. Ciliates were grown axenically in 3 types of culture media. More than 30 fatty acid species were identified and their structures determined by gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, argentation chromatography, hydro-genation, and fragmentation technics. The major fatty acids were hexadecanoic, octadecanoic, 9-octadecenoic, 9,12-octadecadi-enoic, 6,9,12-octadecatrienoic, and 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraenoic acids. Minor variations in fatty acid compositions were observed in cells grown in the different culture media as well as among the 3 strains. Major changes in fatty acid compositions occurred with culture age and cell density. The cells accumulated exogenous lipids in cytoplasmic vesicles. These lipids were utilized as culture age progressed. Both cellular volume and lipid content were greater in young than in older cultures. Fatty acid compositions of both whole cells and cilia changed with age and had a relative decrease in saturated, short-chained and odd-numbered carbon acids. Cilia lipids were enriched in long-chained, polyunsaturated acids as compared to lipids in whole cell extracts. Eicosatetra-enoic acid (arachidonic acid) increased to the greatest extent with age in both cellular and ciliary lipids, accounting for 20–60% of the total fatty acids in cilia. The age-related change in fatty acid composition in Paramecium is among the largest observed in eukaryotic organisms. It was concluded that some minor fatty acids found in Paramecium lipids were incorporated directly from certain culture media and that Paramecium had w 3, 6, and 9 pathways for polyunsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

9.
In Staphylococcus aureus, 64 fatty acids could be separated by gas-liquid chromatography. The fatty acids consisted of normal, iso, and anteiso saturated fatty acids of from 10 to 21 carbon atoms. Of the total fatty acids, 2 to 4% were normal, iso, and anteiso monoenoic fatty acids. Positional isomers of the normal monoenoic fatty acids could be detected. The fatty acids could be extracted, leaving 1 to 2% of the total fatty acids in the residue. The proportions of the fatty acids in the residue and the total lipids differed significantly. The lipid extract contained less than 0.12% free fatty acid. Between 5 and 10% of the lipid fatty acids were associated with neutral lipids. The majority of the fatty acids were associated with the complex lipids: mono- and diglucosyl diglyceride, phosphatidyl glycerol, lysyl phosphatidyl glycerol, and cardiolipin. The proportions of the fatty acids changed markedly between bacteria grown anaerobically (no membrane-bound electron transport system) and those grown aerobically (containing a functional electron transport system). In each of the complex lipids, the proportions of the fatty acids, as well as the magnitude and direction of change in the molar quantity of the fatty acids per bacterium, changed dramatically between these growth conditions. Since the glucosyl diglycerides and phospholipids were formed from the same pool of diglyceride intermediates, the marked differences in fatty acids indicate that acyl transferase activities must be an important part of complex lipid metabolism in S. aureus.  相似文献   

10.
When grown on vegetable oils and their derivatives, the smut fungus Ustilago maydis (DSM 4500 and ATCC 14826) produces several glycolipids under nitrogen-limiting conditions. With 45 g l−1 sunflower oil fatty acids (technical grade) a yield of 30 g l−1 glycolipid was achieved. The resulting mixture contained predominantly mannosylerythritol lipids together with smaller amounts of cellobiose lipids. The production of the more polar cellobiose lipids was enhanced when glucose was used as carbon source. The molecular structure of the main components of the glycolipid mixture were elucidated by a combination of NMR spectroscopic and mass-spectrometric techniques. Received: 22 June 1998 / Received revision: 11 September 1998 / Accepted: 13 September 1998  相似文献   

11.
An alkane-degrading, sulfate-reducing bacterial strain, AK-01, isolated from a petroleum-contaminated sediment was studied to elucidate its mechanism of alkane metabolism. Total cellular fatty acids of AK-01 were predominantly C even when it was grown on C-even alkanes and were predominantly C odd when grown on C-odd alkanes, suggesting that the bacterium anaerobically oxidizes alkanes to fatty acids. Among these fatty acids, some 2-, 4-, and 6-methylated fatty acids were specifically found only when AK-01 was grown on alkanes, and their chain lengths always correlated with those of the alkanes. When [1,2-(13)C(2)]hexadecane or perdeuterated pentadecane was used as the growth substrate, (13)C-labeled 2-Me-16:0, 4-Me-18:0, and 6-Me-20:0 fatty acids or deuterated 2-Me-15:0, 4-Me-17:0, and 6-Me-19:0 fatty acids were recovered, respectively, confirming that these monomethylated fatty acids were alkane derived. Examination of the (13)C-labeled 2-, 4-, and 6-methylated fatty acids by mass spectrometry showed that each of them contained two (13)C atoms, located at the methyl group and the adjacent carbon, thus indicating that the methyl group was the original terminal carbon of the [1, 2-(13)C(2)]hexadecane. For perdeuterated pentadecane, the presence of three deuterium atoms, on the methyl group and its adjacent carbon, in each of the deuterated 2-, 4-, and 6-methylated fatty acids further supported the hypothesis that the methyl group was the terminal carbon of the alkane. Thus, exogenous carbon appears to be initially added to an alkane subterminally at the C-2 position such that the original terminal carbon of the alkane becomes a methyl group on the subsequently formed fatty acid. The carbon addition reaction, however, does not appear to be a direct carboxylation of inorganic bicarbonate. A pathway for anaerobic metabolism of alkanes by strain AK-01 is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
Strain Hxd3, an alkane-degrading sulfate reducer previously isolated and described by Aeckersberg et al. (F. Aeckersberg, F. Bak, and F. Widdel, Arch. Microbiol. 156:5-14, 1991), was studied for its alkane degradation mechanism by using deuterium and (13)C-labeled compounds. Deuterated fatty acids with even numbers of C atoms (C-even) and (13)C-labeled fatty acids with odd numbers of C atoms (C-odd) were recovered from cultures of Hxd3 grown on perdeuterated pentadecane and [1,2-(13)C(2)]hexadecane, respectively, underscoring evidence that C-odd alkanes are transformed to C-even fatty acids and vice versa. When Hxd3 was grown on unlabeled hexadecane in the presence of [(13)C]bicarbonate, the resulting 15:0 fatty acid, which was one carbon shorter than the alkane, incorporated a (13)C label to form its carboxyl group. The same results were observed when tetradecane, pentadecane, and perdeuterated pentadecane were used as the substrates. These observations indicate that the initial attack of alkanes includes both carboxylation with inorganic bicarbonate and the removal of two carbon atoms from the alkane chain terminus, resulting in a fatty acid one carbon shorter than the original alkane. The removal of two terminal carbon atoms is further evidenced by the observation that the [1,2-(13)C(2)]hexadecane-derived fatty acids contained either two (13)C labels located exclusively at their acyl chain termini or none at all. Furthermore, when perdeuterated pentadecane was used as the substrate, the 14:0 and 16:0 fatty acids formed both carried the same numbers of deuterium labels, while the latter was not deuterated at its carboxyl end. These observations provide further evidence that the 14:0 fatty acid was initially formed from perdeuterated pentadecane, while the 16:0 fatty acid was produced after chain elongation of the former fatty acid with nondeuterated carbon atoms. We propose that strain Hxd3 anaerobically transforms an alkane to a fatty acid through a mechanism which includes subterminal carboxylation at the C-3 position of the alkane and elimination of the two adjacent terminal carbon atoms.  相似文献   

13.
The present study outlines a process for the cost-effective production of 13C/15N-labelled biomass of microalgae on a commercial scale. The core of the process is a bubble column photobioreactor with exhaust gas recirculation by means of a low-pressure compressor. To avoid accumulation of dissolved oxygen in the culture, the exhaust gas is bubbled through a sodium sulphite solution prior to its return to the reactor. The engineered system can be used for the production of 13C, 15N, and 13C-15N stable isotope-labelled biomass as required. To produce 13C-labelled biomass, 13CO2 is injected on demand for pH control and carbon supply, whereas for 15N-labelled biomass Na15NO3 is supplied as nitrogen source at the stochiometric concentration. The reactor is operated in semicontinuous mode at different biomass concentrations, yielding a maximum mean biomass productivity of 0.3 gL(-1) day(-1). In order to maximize the uptake efficiency of the labelled substrates, the inorganic carbon is recovered from the supernatant by acidification/desorption processes, while the nitrate is delivered at stochiometric concentration and the harvesting of biomass is performed when the 15NO3- is depleted. In these conditions, elemental analysis of both biomass and supernatant shows that 89.2% of the injected carbon is assimilated into the biomass and 6.9% remains in the supernatant. Based on elemental analysis, 97.8% of the supplied nitrogen is assimilated into the biomass and 1.3% remains in the supernatant. Stable isotope-labelling enrichment has been analysed by GC-MS results showing that the biomass is highly labelled. All the fatty acids are labelled; more than 96% of the carbon present in these fatty acids is 13C. The engineered system was stably operated for 3 months, producing over 160 g of 13C and/or 15N-labelled biomass. The engineered bioreactor can be applied for the labelling of various microalgae.  相似文献   

14.
1. Incorporation studies with three labelled substrates--[14C]2-glycerol, [14C]1-acetate and [14C]1-oleic acid--demonstrated that adult dog heartworms can synthesize all classes of complex lipids present, including free cholesterol. 2. Diacylglycerols and phosphoglycerides were most rapidly labelled regardless of the precursor employed. 3. 14C from glycerol was found in the aqueous phase of saponified lipids, whereas that from oleic acid was in the fatty acid portion. 4. Tag from acetate was predominantly in the fatty acid portion of saponified lipids and also occurred in the unesterified fatty acids. 5. Acetate and unesterified fatty acids, as represented by oleic acid, were more readily used for lipid synthesis than was glycerol.  相似文献   

15.
It is found out that the content of lipids in the biomass of the studied populations of Eisenia foetida is rather high: 2.5-5.2% of the wet mass. The content of phospholipids is 40-55%, C27-sterols--1.5-3.4% of the mass of coarse extracts of lipids. Lipids of tissues contain also 47-54% of saturated (C10-C24) fatty acids as well as to 23% of monoene and to 13% of polyene unsaturated (C14-C22) fatty acids. The acids with the odd number of carbon atoms compose about 25% and acids with a branched carbon chain about 23% of the above percentage. Considerable content of lipids and biologically active fatty acids in tissues of the studied object permits considering it as a promising source of raw materials for production of valuable pharmacological preparations.  相似文献   

16.
Growth and sporulation of a Bacillus subtilis mutant deficient in branched fatty acid synthesis (gene symbol bfmB) were examined. The mutant, which produces an acyl-coenzyme A:acyl carrier protein transacylase with reduced affinity for branched fatty acid primers, could grow in media containing any one of a wide range of low-molecular-weight fatty acids having branched, cyclic, saturated, or unsaturated carbon chains. The fatty acid composition of cellular lipids depended on the compound used to support growth. Cultures of the bfmB mutant grown in the presence of 3-methylcrotonate contained an unusually high fraction (73%) of straight-chain fatty acids in the cellular lipids. The mutant sporulated with any one of the precursors of branched fatty acids in the medium; isolated spores contained mainly this branched fatty acid and only 10% or less straight-chain fatty acids regardless of the straight-chain fatty acid content of vegetative cells. Exceptional were spores grown in the presence of cyclobutane-carboxylic acid, which contained 28% straight-chain fatty acids. The branched fatty acid composition of spores could be modified greatly by changing the supply of precursors in the medium.  相似文献   

17.
Candida lipolytica, grown onn-hexadecane as the sole source of carbon and energy, contained 17.1% lipids in the logarithmic phase of growth, and 7.3% lipids in the stationary phase of growth. When the yeast was grown on glucose, it contained 6.2% lipids in the logarithmic phase of growth, and 3.6% lipids in the stationary phase of growth. Fatty acids, that could be extracted by petroleum ether after saponification, constituted the major part of the fatty acids ofC. lipolytica in its logarithmic phase of growth on glucose. They constituted only a minor amount of the fatty acids in the stationary phase of growth on glucose. The reverse was true when the yeast was grown onn-hexadecane. The broth contained more free, petroleum ether-soluble fatty acids when the cellular lipid content was high than when it was low. Overnight starvation ofC. lipolytica grown onn-hexadecane in a carbon-free nutrient medium, removed the residual cell-bound hydrocarbon, increased the cell population by one half and decreased the cellular lipid content (as % of dry yeast) by one third. Various methods for the determination of lipids, described as appropriate for yeasts were compared. The highest yields were obtained by extraction of the freeze-dried paste, at room temperature, with a 1:1 chloroform-methanol mixture.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Candida guilliermondii strain 1 was grown on solar as a sole carbon source for 14 days, and the lipid classes were investigated. The yeast showed high affinity towards hydrocarbons of short chain length, and within 6 days the cellular lipid classes represented 39.69%, 27.50%, 15.35%, 2.23%, 16.20% of hydrocarbons, neutral lipids, free fatty acids, sterols and polar lipids respectively. Undecanoic and hexadecanoic acids were the major fatty acids of the cellular neutral lipids and oleic acid was the major component of the polar lipids.  相似文献   

19.
The lipids of the heterotrophic microalga Crypthecodinium cohnii contain the omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) and docosahexaenoic acid (22:6) to a level of over 30%. The pathway of 22:6 synthesis in C. cohnii is unknown. The ability of C. cohnii to use 13C-labelled externally supplied precursor molecules for 22:6 biosynthesis was tested by 13C NMR analysis. Furthermore, the presence of desaturases (typical for aerobic PUFA synthesis) was studied by the addition of specific desaturase inhibitors in the growth medium. The addition of 1-(13)C acetate or 1-(13)C butyrate in the growth medium resulted in 22:6 with only the odd carbon atoms enriched. Apparently, two-carbon units were used as building blocks for 22:6 synthesis and butyrate was first split into two-carbon units prior to incorporation in 22:6. When 1-(13)C oleic acid was added to the growth medium, 1-(13)C oleic acid was incorporated into the lipids of C. cohnii but was not used as a precursor for the synthesis of 22:6. Specific desaturase inhibitors (norflurazon and propyl gallate) inhibited lipid accumulation in C. cohnii. The fatty acid profile, however, was not altered. In contrast, in the arachidonic acid-producing fungus, Mortierella alpina, these inhibitors not only decreased the lipid content but also altered the fatty acid profile. Our results can be explained by the presence of three tightly regulated separate systems for the fatty acid production by C. cohnii, namely for (1). the biosynthesis of saturated fatty acids, (2). the conversion of saturated fatty acids to monounsaturated fatty acids and (3). the de novo synthesis of 22:6 with desaturases involved.  相似文献   

20.
W-Anthryl labelled fatty acids with hydrocarbon chains of different lengths (C8, C11, C15) and different degrees of unsaturation have been incorporated into the membrane lipids of three different cell lines in tissue culture by addition of these 3H-labelled precursor fatty acids to the growth medium. The cell lines were baby hamster kidney cells (BHK 21), Chang liver cells and the RN6 cell line derived from a chemically induced Schwannoma tumor cell clone. Cell growth was normal. The quantitative analysis on the basis of radioactivity determinations demonstrated that the fluorescent-labelled fatty acids were introduced into the neutral lipid fraction (triglycerides, diglycerides, and cholesterol esters, all present in small amounts), but mainly into the phospholipid classes phosphatidylcholine, -ethanolamine and -serine, and to a lesser extent, as N-acyl component of sphingolipids (sphingomyelins, ceramides, mono- and diglycosylceramides). Cell fractionation studies indicated that the membranes of all subcellular particles were labelled with the fluorescent probes in their lipid moieties. These w-anthryl fatty acids are the first type of fluorescent lipid precursors which can be incorporated biosynthetically in vivo into membrane lipids of eukaryotic cells. The effective incorporation of the bulky fluorescent anthryl group in the terminal position of fatty acids of different chain lengths into the complex membrane lipids of the cell gives proff of 1) their uninhibited membrane transport, 2) their activation by the acyl-CoA synthetase and 3) their substrate properties for the O- acyl and N-acyl transferases in phospho- and sphingolipid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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