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1.
The conversion of free lignoceric acid and sphingosine to lignoceroyl sphingosine (ceramide) by rat brain particulate fraction and two cytosolic factors, one heat-stable and the other heat-labile, requires pyridine nucleotide. This enzymatic reaction is apparently different from two previously published enzymic reactions, microsomal sphingosine:acyl CoA acyltransferase and the reverse reaction of lysosomal ceramidase. The reaction is strongly inhibited by common respiratory chain inhibitors, KCN, Antimycin A and sodium azide, this indicates the involvement of an electron-transfer system. From these observations it appears that the brain ceramide synthesis described above is catalyzed by an enzyme system which involves a mechanism for amide formation which has not been previously characterized.  相似文献   

2.
Lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity has been detected in microsomal fractions prepared from rat brain. The synthesis of lignoceroyl-CoA from [1-14C]lignoceric acid and CoASH by this enzyme had an absolute dependence on ATP and Mg2+; ATP could not be replaced by GTP [I. Singh, M. S. Kang, and L. Phillips (1982) Fed. Proc. 41, 1192]. The product has been characterized as lignoceroyl-CoA by the following criteria: Rf on thin-layer chromatography; incorporation of [1-14C]lignoceric acid and [3H]CoASH into the product; acid hydrolysis and identification of the radiolabel in lignoceric acid; and methanolysis and identification of the radiolabel in methyl lignocerate by thin-layer chromatography. The optimal concentrations for CoASH, ATP, and Mg2+ were about 100 microM, 10 mM, and 5 mM, respectively. Lignoceric acid, solubilized by alpha-cyclodextrin, Triton X-100, and deoxycholate, was utilized by the lignoceroyl-CoA ligase, but lignoceric acid solubilized by Triton WR-1339 was not. Topographical localization of lignoceroyl-CoA ligase in the plane of rat brain microsomal membranes was determined by the use of Triton X-100, trypsin, and mercury-Dextran, and was compared with the marker enzymes, ethanol acyltransferase and thiamine pyrophosphatase, which are known to be localized on the luminal (inner) surface of the microsomal vesicles. Mercury-Dextran (100 microM) and trypsin (trypsin:microsomes, 1:56 w/w) treatment of the microsomes inhibited the lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity by 70 and 90% without disrupting the microsomal vesicles. Disruption of the vesicles with Triton X-100 increased the activity of both ethanol acyltransferase and thiamine pyrophosphatase by 400% but there was no increase in lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity. These results suggest that lignoceroyl-CoA ligase is localized on the cytoplasmic surface of the microsomal vesicles.  相似文献   

3.
Palmitic acid solubilized with Triton WR-1339 was converted to palmitoyl-CoA by microsomal membranes but lignoceric acid solubilized with Triton WR-1339 was not an effective substrate even though the detergent dispersed the same amount of these fatty acids and was also not inhibitory to the enzyme [I. Singh, R. P. Singh, A. Bhushan, and A. K. Singh (1985) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 236, 418-426]. This observation suggested that palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA may be synthesized by two different enzymes. We have solubilized the acyl-CoA ligase activities for palmitic and lignoceric acid of rat brain microsomal membranes with Triton X-100 and resolved them into three separate peaks (fractions) by hydroxylapatite chromatography. Fraction A (palmitoyl-CoA ligase) had high specific activity for palmitic acid and Fraction C (lignoceroyl-CoA ligase) for lignoceric acid. Specific activity of palmitoyl-CoA ligase for palmitic acid was six times higher than in Fraction C and specific activity of lignoceroyl-CoA ligase for lignoceric acid was four times higher than in Fraction A. At higher concentrations of Triton X-100 (0.5%), lignoceroyl-CoA ligase loses activity whereas palmitoyl-CoA ligase does not. Lignoceroyl-CoA ligase lost 60% of activity at 0.6% Triton X-100. Palmitoyl-CoA ligase (T1/2 of 4.5 min) is more stable at 40 degrees C than lignoceroyl-CoA ligase (T1/2 of 1.5 min). The pH optimum of palmitoyl-CoA ligase was 7.7 and that of lignoceroyl-CoA ligase was 8.4. Similar to our results with intact membranes, palmitic acid solubilized with Triton WR-1339 was converted to palmitoyl-CoA by palmitoyl-CoA ligase whereas lignoceric acid when solubilized with Triton WR-1339 was not able to act as substrate for lignoceroyl-CoA ligase. Since solubilized enzyme activities for synthesis of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA from microsomal membranes can be resolved into different fractions by column chromatography and demonstrate different properties, we suggest that in microsomal membranes palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA are synthesized by two different enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
The objective of this study was to determine whether the conversion of free, very long chain fatty acids (C22–C26) to their CoA-esters are involved in cerebroside synthesis, since cerebrosides are uniquely rich in very long chain fatty acids including lignoceric acid (C24:0). We have studied lignoceroyl-CoA synthetase activity in the microsomes isolated from normal and jimpy mouse brain. The jimpy mouse lacks the ability to make myelin and is deficient in enzyme activities involved in the synthesis of myelin components, including cerebrosides. Unexpectedly, the lignoceroyl-CoA synthetase activity in jimpy brain microsomes was slightly higher than that in control microsomes. The palmitoyl (C16:0)-CoA synthetase activity in jimpy brain was not different from the control. The level of cerebrosides in microsomes was grossly lower in jimpy brain. The implication of these findings and the involvement of lignoceric acid activation in cerebroside synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The acyl-CoA ligases convert free fatty acids to acyl-CoA derivatives, and these enzymes have been shown to be present in mitochondria, peroxisomes, and endoplasmic reticulum. Because their activity is obligatory for fatty acid metabolism, it is important to identify their substrate specificities and subcellular distributions to further understand the cellular regulation of these pathways. To define the role of the enzymes and organelles involved in the metabolism of very long chain (VLC) fatty acids, we studied human genetic cell mutants impaired for the metabolism of these molecules. Fibroblast cell lines were derived from patients with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) and Zellweger's cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome (CHRS). While peroxisomes are present and morphologically normal in X-ALD, they are either greatly reduced in number or absent in CHRS. Palmitoyl-CoA ligase is known to be present in mitochondria, peroxisomes, and endoplasmic reticulum (microsomes). We found enzyme-dependent formation of lignoceroyl-CoA in these same organelles (specific activities were 0.32 +/- 0.12, 0.86 +/- 0.12, and 0.78 +/- 0.07 nmol/h per mg protein, respectively). However, lignoceroyl-CoA synthesis was inhibited by an antibody to palmitoyl-CoA ligase in isolated mitochondria while it was not inhibited in peroxisomes or endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This suggests that palmitoyl-CoA ligase and lignoceroyl-CoA are different enzymes and that mitochondria lack lignoceroyl-CoA ligase. This conclusion is further supported by data showing that oxidation of lignoceric acid was found almost exclusively in peroxisomes (0.17 nmol/h per mg protein) but was largely absent from mitochondria and the finding that monolayers of CHRS fibroblasts lacking peroxisomes showed a pronounced deficiency in lignoceric acid oxidation in situ (1.8% of control). In spite of the observation that lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity is present on the cytoplasmic surface of ER, our data indicate that lignoceroyl-CoA synthesized by ER is not available for oxidation in mitochondria. This organelle plays no physiological role in the beta-oxidation of VLC fatty acids. Furthermore, the normal peroxisomal oxidation of lignoceroyl-CoA but deficient oxidation of lignoceric acid in X-ALD cells indicates that cellular VLC fatty acid oxidation is dependent on peroxisomal lignoceroyl-CoA ligase. These studies allow us to propose a model for the subcellular localization of various acyl-CoA ligases and to describe how these enzymes control cellular fatty acid metabolism.  相似文献   

6.
1. The enzymatic mechanism of the alpha-hydroxylation of lignoceroyl-CoA, an intermediate in the synthesis of hydroxyceramide, was studied. In the presence of NADPH, sphingosine and microsomes from 20-day-old rat brain, 14C from [1-14C]lignoceroyl-CoA was incorporated into hydroxyceramide. 2. The alpha-hydroxylation of lignoceroyl-CoA in rat brain microsomes was strongly inhibited by a rabbit anti-immunoglobulin G which was prepared against rat liver microsomal NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. However, anti-immunoglobulin G against cytochrome b5 did not inhibit the alpha-hydroxylase activity. 3. The alpha-hydroxylation activity was more sensitive to trypsin treatment than was NADPH-cytochrome c reductase in rat brain microsomes. This indicates that either alpha-hydroxylase itself or an unknown factor essential in alpha-hydroxylation is highly exposed to the surface of brain microsomes.  相似文献   

7.
We have previously shown the existence of two separate enzymes for the synthesis of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA in rat brain microsomal membranes (1). Palmitoyl-CoA ligase activity was solubilized from brain microsomal membranes with 0.3% Triton X-100 and purified 93-fold by a combination of protein purification techniques. The Km values for the substrates palmitic acid, CoASH and ATP were 11.7 microM, 5.88 microM and 3.77 mM respectively. During activation of palmitic acid ATP is hydrolyzed to AMP and pyrophosphate, as evidenced by the inhibition of this activation by 5 mM concentrations of AMP, pyrophosphate or AMP and pyrophosphate to 70%, 60% and 85% respectively. The divalent metal ion Mg2+ was required for activity; its replacement with Mn2+ resulted in a 35% decrease in activity. Palmitoyl-CoA ligase activity was inhibited by the addition of oleic or stearic acids whereas addition of lignoceric acid or behenic acid had no effect. This supports our previous observation that palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA are synthesized by two different enzymes in rat brain microsomal membranes.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the pathways involved in the peroxisomal oxidation of palmitate and lignocerate, measured as the cyanide-insensitive formation of acetyl units, in rat-liver homogenates. The peroxisomal beta-oxidation of both fatty acids is dependent on the presence of ATP, coenzyme A, NAD+ and Mg2+. However, there is a striking difference in the dependence of the rate of oxidation of the two substrates on the concentration of the individual cofactors, especially ATP. The peroxisomal beta-oxidation of lignocerate was inhibited to a progressively greater extent by increasing concentrations of palmitate and vice versa. Activation of lignoceric acid to lignoceroyl-CoA, however, was not inhibited by increasing concentrations of palmitate, and vice versa. It can be concluded that the peroxisomal palmitate and lignocerate beta-oxidation pathways differ in at least one enzymic reaction (the synthetase), but that the two pathways share at least one common step.  相似文献   

9.
Fatty acyl-CoA synthetase purified from rat liver microsomes was immobilized on either CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B or activated CH-Sepharose 4B, and the enzymatic activities of the syntheses of CoA esters from lignoceric acid (C24:0) and palmitic acid (C16:0) were studied and compared. The ratio of activities of the synthesis of lignoceroyl-CoA to palmitoyl-CoA increased 4.5 fold with CH-Sepharose, but only slightly with CNBr-Sepharose. The effects of a detergent and chaotropic agent on both substrates were significantly altered by the immobilization. The results of this study thus indicate that the stability and fatty acid specificity of fatty acyl-CoA synthetase are significantly affected by the physical state of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The different topology of palmitoyl-CoA ligase (on the cytoplasmic surface) and of lignoceroyl-CoA ligase (on the luminal surface) in peroxisomal membranes suggests that these fatty acids may be transported in different form through the peroxisomal membrane (Lazo, O., Contreras, M., and Singh, I. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3981-3986), and this differential transport may account for deficient oxidation of lignoceric acid in X-adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) (Singh, I., Moser, A. B., Goldfisher, S., and Moser, H. W. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 4203-4207). To define the transport mechanism for these fatty acids through the peroxisomal membrane and its possible implication to lignoceric acid metabolism in X-ALD, we examined cofactors and energy requirements for the transport of palmitic and lignoceric acids in isolated peroxisomes from rat liver and peroxisomes isolated from X-ALD and control fibroblasts. The similar rates of transport of palmitoyl-CoA (87.6 +/- 6.3 nmol/h/mg protein) and palmitic acid in the fatty acid activating conditions (83.4 +/- 5.1 nmol/h/mg protein) and lack of transport of palmitic acid (4% of palmitoyl-CoA transport) when ATP and/or CoASH were removed or substituted by alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine-5'-triphosphate (AMPCPOP) and/or desulfoCoA-agarose from assay medium clearly demonstrate that transport of palmitic acid requires prior synthesis of palmitoyl-CoA by palmitoyl-CoA ligase on the cytoplasmic surface of peroxisomes. The 10-fold higher rate of transport of lignoceric acid (5.3 +/- 0.6 nmol/h/mg protein) as compared with lignoceroyl-CoA (0.41 +/- 0.11 nmol/h/mg protein) and lack of inhibition of transport of lignoceric acid when ATP and/or CoASH were removed or substituted with AMPCPOP or desulfoCoA-agarose suggest that lignoceric acid is transported through the peroxisomal membrane as such. Moreover, the lack of effect of removal of ATP or substitution with AMPOPCP (a nonhydrolyzable substrate) demonstrates that the translocation of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceric acid across peroxisomal membrane does not require energy. The transport, activation, and oxidation of palmitic acid are normal in peroxisomes from X-ALD. The deficient lignoceroyl-CoA ligase (13% of control) and oxidation of lignoceric acid (10% of control) as compared with normal transport of lignoceric acid into peroxisomes from X-ALD clearly demonstrates that pathogenomonic accumulation of very long chain fatty acids (greater than C22) in X-ALD is due to the deficiency of peroxisomal lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activity.  相似文献   

11.
The enzymatic mechanism of alpha-hydroxylation of lignoceroyl-CoA, an intermediate in the synthesis of hydroxyceramide, was studied. In the presence of NADPH, sphingosine and microsomes from 20-day-old rat brain, 14C from [1-14C]lignoceroyl-CoA was incorporated into hydroxyceramide. Activity was linear with time (up to 40 min) and with protein (up to 0.8 mg). The apparent Km for lignoceroyl-CoA was about 10 microM. NADPH was a more efficient electron donor than NADH. Oxygen was required for activity, which increased linearly up to 20% O2. In 5 and 10% oxygen, the reaction was inhibited by 0.1 mM cyanide and by electron transfer chain inhibitors, cytochrome c, ferricyanide, menadione, and p-chloromercuriphenyl sulphonate; CO and SKF-525A had no effect. Moreover none of the inhibitors affected the formation of hydroxyceramide. Lignoceroyl-CoA alpha-hydroxylase appears to be an oxygenase requiring NADPH and oxygen, which involves cyanide-sensitive enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The amidification of sphingosine by acyl donors has been investigated in a microsomal fraction prepared from sciatic nerves of normal and Trembler mice. In the control, a ceramide synthesis is observed in the presence of acyl-CoAs and not with free fatty acids. The synthesis increases as a function of the protein amount and the time and is dependent on acyl-CoA concentration. The level of synthesis is highly similar to that observed in vivo after palmitate injection into the sciatic nerves of normal mice. In the mutant, there is a major abnormality because a weak synthesis (20% of the control) is observed only with high acyl-CoA concentration (greater than 200 microM), whereas in the range of the physiological acyl-CoA concentrations (less than 20 microM), there is no ceramide formation from stearoyl-CoA or lignoceroyl-CoA.  相似文献   

13.
alpha-Cyclodextrin at concentrations of 1-8 mM helps dissolve, in aqueous solution, fatty acids such as lignoceric, stearic, and palmitic, and complex lipids such as ceramide and cerebroside that contain these acids. Formation of an inclusion complex was indicated on examination of the solution by gel filtration. alpha-Cyclodextrin strikingly increased synthesis of ceramide from sphingosine and either free lignoceric or stearic acid by rat brain preparations. These results suggest the further use of alpha-cyclodextrin in lipid enzymology, especially in relation to sphingolipid metabolism.  相似文献   

14.
Very long chain fatty acids (lignoceric acid) are oxidized in peroxisomes and pathognomonic amounts of these fatty acids accumulate in X-adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) due to a defect in their oxidation. However, in cellular homogenates from X-ALD cells, lignoceric acid is oxidized at a rate of 38% of control cells. Therefore, to identify the source of this residual activity we raised antibody to palmitoyl-CoA ligase and examined its effect on the activation and oxidation of palmitic and lignoceric acids in isolated peroxisomes from control and X-ALD fibroblasts. The normalization of peroxisomal lignoceric acid oxidation in the presence of exogenously added acyl-CoA ligases and along with the complete inhibition of activation and oxidation of palmitic and lignoceric acids in peroxisomes from X-ALD by antibody to palmitoyl-CoA ligase provides direct evidence that lignoceroyl-CoA ligase is deficient in X-ALD and demonstrates that the residual activity for the oxidation of lignoceric acid was derived from the activation of lignoceric acid by peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA ligase. This antibody inhibited the activation and oxidation of palmitic acid but had little effect on these activities for lignoceric acid in peroxisomes from control cells. Furthermore, these data provide evidence that peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA ligases are two different enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
Peroxisomes isolated from cultured skin fibroblasts of two patients with rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata (RCDP) and two controls were compared for biochemical studies. These experiments provided the following results: (1) peroxisomes isolated from RCDP-cultured skin fibroblasts had the same density (1.175 g/ml) as control peroxisomes; (2) dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase activity, the first enzyme in the synthesis of plasmalogens, was deficient (0.5% of control) in RCDP peroxisomes and this activity was not observed in any other region of the gradient; (3) the rate of activation (lignoceroyl-CoA ligase) and oxidation of lignoceric acid was normal in RCDP peroxisomes; and (4) peroxisomes from RCDP contained 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase in the unprocessed form (44-kDa protein), whereas control peroxisomes had both processed (41-kDa protein) and unprocessed forms of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase. The presence of both processed and unprocessed 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase in control peroxisomes and the unprocessed form in RCDP peroxisomes suggests that processing of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase takes place in peroxisomes. Although the specific activity and percentage of activity of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase in RCDP peroxisomes was only 22-26% of control, the normal oxidation of lignoceric acid in RCDP peroxisomes indicates that unprocessed 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase is active. The remaining peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase activity in RCDP was observed in a protein fraction (peroxisome ghosts) lighter than peroxisomes. The normal oxidation of fatty acids in peroxisomes and the absence of such activity in peroxisome ghosts (d = 1.12 g/ml) containing peroxisomal proteins in RCDP suggest that RCDP has only one population of functional peroxisomes (d = 1.175 g/ml).  相似文献   

16.
Acyl-CoA ligases from rat brain microsomes: an immunochemical study   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Acyl-CoA ligase activities, solubilized from rat brain microsomes, were fractionated into three different peaks by hydroxyapatite chromatography. Based on physical and chemical properties, we suggested that peak A (pamitoyl-CoA ligase) and peak C (lignoceroyl-CoA ligase) were two different enzymes (A. Bhushan, R. P. Singh, and I. Singh (1986) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 246, 374-380). We raised antibodies against purified liver microsomal palmitoyl-CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3) and examined the effect of this antibody on acyl-CoA ligase activities for palmitic, arachidonic and lignoceric acids in microsomal enzyme extract and different acyl-CoA ligase peaks from the hydroxyapatite column. In an enzyme activity assay system in microsomal extract, the antisera inhibited the palmitoyl-CoA ligase activity but had very little effect on the acyl-CoA ligase activities for arachidonic and lignoceric acids. This antisera inhibited the acyl-CoA ligase activities for these three fatty acids in peak A and had no effect on these activities in peak B or peak C. Western blot analysis demonstrated that antibody to liver microsomal palmitoyl-CoA ligase cross-reacted with only peak A (palmitoyl-CoA ligase), but not with peak B or peak C. This immunochemical study demonstrates that palmitoyl-CoA ligase does not share immunological determinants with acyl-CoA ligases in peaks B or C, thus demonstrating that palmitoyl-CoA ligase (peak A) is different from the arachidonoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA ligase activities in peaks B or C.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of a 2-week clofibrate (0.5%)-fortified diet on peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA ligases was studied. The activities of palmitoyl-CoA and lignoceroyl-CoA ligases in peroxisomes isolated from clofibrate-treated animals were 4.4- and 4.0-fold higher than those of the controls. The different degrees of increases in these two enzyme activities support the previous conclusions that in peroxisomes palmitoyl-CoA ligase and lignoceroyl-CoA ligase are different enzymes. Since clofibrate treatment increases both of these peroxisomal acyl-CoA ligase activities and normal palmitoyl-CoA ligase is the source of the partial activity for the oxidation of lignoceric acid in X-ALD, treatment with a hypolipidemic drug, which can increase human peroxisomal enzyme activities, may be helpful in lowering the amount of the pathogen, VLC fatty acids, in X-ALD.  相似文献   

18.
Cerebronic acid (2-hydroxytetracosanoic acid) is the major fatty acid component of cerebrosides and sulfatides in mammalian brain. Our previous communication demonstrated the synthesis of cerebronic acid from lignoceric acid (tetracosanoic acid) by a rat brain preparation in the presence of molecular oxygen and a reduced pyridine nucleotide (Hoshi, M., and Kishimoto, Y. (1973) J. Biol. Chem., 248, 4123–4130). The present'studies on the conversion of (RS)-[2-3H]-, (RS)-[3-3H]-, (R)-[2-3H]-, and (S)-[2-3H]lignoceric acids to cerebronic acid by rat brain preparations establish that the pro-R hydrogen at the α-carbon of lignoceric acid is replaced by a hydroxyl group with overall retention of configuration.  相似文献   

19.
At the subcellular level, the synthesis of ceramide from free lignoceric acid and sphingosine in brain required reconstituted enzyme system (particulate fraction, heat-stable and heat-labile factors) and pyridine nucleotide (NADPH). The mitochondrial electron transfer inhibitors (KCN and antimycin A), energy uncouplers (oligomycin and 2,4-dinitrophenol), and carboxyatractyloside, which prevents the transport of ATP and ADP through the mitochondrial wall, inhibit the synthesis of ceramide in the presence of NADPH but have very little effect in the presence of ATP. Similar to the synthesis of ceramide, the synthesis of ATP from NADPH and NADH by the particulate fraction also required cytoplasmic factors (heat-stable and heat-labile factors). Moreover, ATP, but not its analog (AMP-CH2-P-O-P), can replace NADPH, thus suggesting that the function of the pyridine nucleotide is to provide ATP for the synthesis of ceramide. The cytoplasmic factors were not required for the synthesis of ceramide in the presence of ATP. The maximum velocity for synthesis of ceramide from free fatty acids of different chain lengths (C16-C26) was bimodal, with maxima around stearic acid (C18) and behenic acid (C22). The relative rate of synthesis of ceramide parallels the relative distribution of these fatty acids in brain cerebrosides and sulfatides.  相似文献   

20.
In order to compare the incorporation of several saturated fatty acids into the brain, radioactive palmitic, stearic and lignoceric acids were injected into mice. The radioactivity was measured in lipids from isolated neurons, astrocytes and myelin.Our data indicate that specific radioactivity of lignoceric acid after its injection was very high in neurons and astrocytes when comparing with serum lignoceric acid specific radioactivity: evidence of the uptake of exogenous lignoceric acid by brain cells and myelin is provided.The incorporation of exogenous palmitic acid into brain cells was much higher than the incorporation of exogenous stearic acid. We hypothesize that exogenous saturated fatty acid uptake is selective in relation with the acyl chain length and the intracerebral synthesis.  相似文献   

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