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1.
This study provides a first approach to observe the effects on Listeria monocytogenes of cellular exposure to acid stress at low or neutral pH, notably how phospho- or neutral lipids are involved in this mechanism, besides the fatty acid profile alteration. A thorough investigation of the composition of polar and neutral lipids from L. monocytogenes grown at pH 5.5 in presence of hydrochloric, acetic and lactic acids, or at neutral pH 7.3 in presence of benzoic acid, is described relative to cells grown in acid-free medium. The results showed that only low pH values enhance the antimicrobial activity of an acid. We suggest that, irrespective of pH, the acid adaptation response will lead to a similar alteration in fatty acid composition [decreasing the ratio of branched chain/saturated straight fatty acids of total lipids], mainly originating from the neutral lipid class of adapted cultures. Acid adaptation in L. monocytogenes was correlated with a decrease in total lipid phosphorus and, with the exception of cells adapted to benzoic acid, this change in the amount of phosphorus reflected a higher content of the neutral lipid class. Upon acetic or benzoic acid stress the lipid phosphorus proportion was analysed in the main phospholipids present: cardiolipin, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphoaminolipid and phosphatidylinositol. Interestingly only benzoic acid had a dramatic effect on the relative quantities of these four phospholipids.  相似文献   

2.
By a combination of thin-layer chromatography and gas liquid chromatography, a complete study of the development of the different lipid classes and of their fatty acids, during the development of the fruit of Hedera helix L., the English Ivy, has been achieved. In any part of the fruit observed, at any particular stage, the phospholipids and the neutral lipids are the most abundant lipid classes. They accumulate during the entire process of maturation, whereas significant changes occur in their relative proportions, phospholipids being largely dominant until fruit blackening. The accumulation of fatty acids during maturation is characterized by large amounts of C18:1 in the neutral lipids, especially in the seed, where petroselinic acid (C18:1Δ6) reaches 86% of the total fatty acids. To a smaller extent, the phospholipids also accumulate and thus have the character of reserve molecules. However, their composition remains more stable, which relates them to the “structural lipids” such as galactolipids that maintain their characteristic fatty acid composition, despite the radical changes occurring in the fatty acid metabolism during fruit ripening.  相似文献   

3.
The lipid and fatty acid compositions in two edible subtropical algae (the brown alga Cladosiphon okamuranus Tokida and the green alga Caulerpa lentillifera J. Agardh) were determined to clarify their lipid characteristics and nutritional values. Glycolipids and phospholipids were the major lipid classes, with significant levels of triacylglycerols. Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were the major fatty acids of both algae. The lipid class composition and major fatty acids were similar in both the algal species, irrespective of wild and cultured specimens. Typical n‐6 PUFA, such as 18:2n‐6 (linoleic acid) and 20:4n‐6 (arachidonic acid), occurred in characteristically high levels in both of the algae. High levels of n‐3 PUFA were measured in all lipid classes of both species without 22:6n‐3 (docosahexaenoic acid), 18:3n‐3, 18:4n‐3, and 20:5n‐3 (eicosapentaenoic acid) for Cl. okamuranus; and 16:3n‐3, 18:3n‐3, and 20:5n‐3 for Ca. lentillifera. The finding suggests that the green algal species, which mainly biosynthesizes short‐chain (C16 and C18) PUFA, differs from that of the brown alga, which is capable of biosynthesizing high 20:5n‐3 levels. The PUFA levels in glycolipids of the two algal species comprised up to 60%, even though they are subtropical marine species. High n‐6 PUFA levels in the algal lipids probably influence the significant levels of n‐6 PUFA in herbivorous fishes, because the n‐6 PUFA levels in marine fish lipids are generally undetectable or negligible.  相似文献   

4.
The Chlorarachniophyceae are unicellular eukaryotic algae characterized by an amoeboid morphology that may be the result of secondary endosymbiosis of a green alga by a nonphotosynthetic amoeba or amoeboflagellate. Whereas much is known about the phylogeny of chlorarachniophytes, little is known about their physiology, particularly that of their lipids. In an initial effort to characterize the lipids of this algal class, four organisms from three genera were examined for their fatty acid and sterol composition. Fatty acids from lipid fractions containing chloroplast‐associated glycolipids, storage triglycerides, and cytoplasmic membrane‐associated polar lipids were characterized. Glycolipid‐associated fatty acids were of limited composition, principally eicosapentaenoic acid [20:5(n‐3)] and hexadecanoic acid (16:0). Triglyceride‐associated fatty acids, although minor, were found to be similar in composition. The polar lipid fraction was dominated by lipids that did not contain phosphorus and had a more variable fatty acid composition with 16:0 and docosapentaenoic acid [22:5(n‐3)] dominant along with a number of minor C18 and C20 fatty acids. Crinosterol and one of the epimeric pair poriferasterol/stigmasterol were the sole sterols. Several genes required for synthesis of these sterols were computationally identified in Bigelowiella natans Moestrup. One sterol biosynthesis gene showed the greatest similarity to SMT1 of the green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. However, homologues to other species, mostly green plant species, were also found. Further, the method used for identification suggested that the sequences were transferred to a genetic compartment other than the likely original location, the nucleomorph nucleus.  相似文献   

5.
Amadi is a small sized edible marine fish species (Coilia reynaldi) under the order-Clupeiformes. It is important for principal lipids and in particular for highly unsaturated fatty acids which have potential biomedical benefits. Among the lipid classes, phospholipids were found to be the most predominant constituents than the glycolipid and neutral lipid in Amadi. Twenty six fatty acids were quantified by open tube gas–liquid chromatography. Dominant fatty acids in this fish are Palmitic acid (C16:0), Stearic acid (C18:0), Oleic acid (C18:1n?9), Myristic acid (C14:0), Palmitoleic acid (C16:1), Docosahexanoic acid (C22:6n?3), Pentadecanoic acid (C15:0), and Eicosatetraenoic acid (C20:4n?3). Fatty acid deficiency in fish species is indicated by the presence of C20:3n?9 acid. It is absent in this fish.The content of DHA and EPA are maximum in amount in neutral lipid than other lipid classes.  相似文献   

6.
Poddar‐Sarkar, M., Raha, P., Bhar, R., Chakraborty, A. and Brahmachary, R.L. 2011. Ultrastructure and lipid chemistry of specialized epidermal structure of Indian porcupines and hedgehog. —Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 92 : 134–140. In the present study, we investigated the ultrastructural variations of specialized epidermal structure of Indian porcupines (Hystrix indica and Atherurus macrourus) and hedgehog (Hemiechinus collaris) as well as the variation in the fatty acid composition of total lipid fraction. Scanning electron microscope images reveal the usual scaly structure in surface view and network of channels in cross‐section but with different orientation of partition walls. The lipid profile reveals the presence of free sterol, long‐chain alcohol, free fatty acids, wax ester and sterol ester in all the three cases and trace amount of triglyceride, diglyceride and monoglyceride. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analysis of fatty acid methyl ester of total lipid fraction indicates the presence of C8‐C22 fatty acids in Hystrix indica, C8‐C18 in Atherurus macrourus and C8‐C20 fatty acids in Hemiechinus collaris. It is interesting to note that the total lipid fraction of hedgehog shows no branched‐chain, unsaturated and odd‐carbon fatty acids. Odd‐carbon fatty acid and branched‐chain fatty acids detected in the adult H. indica but were absent in juvenile H. indica as well as in A. macrourus. With the exception of C18:1, the other unsaturated fatty acids were also absent in both juvenile H. indica and A. macrourus.  相似文献   

7.
  1. Endomycopsis vernalis was cultivated on media with different N supply: series A 1%, series B 0,125% asparagine. Sonified cells were extracted and yielded 14.3% (A) and 65.3 (B) total lipids/non lipid dry matter respectively.
  2. Neutral and complex lipids were separated by rubber membrane dialysis. There is no difference in the percentage of complex lipids of both series. The increase of lipids in cells grown on low N level is due to a higher content of neutral lipids.
  3. Components of the neutral lipids, analysed by DC, were diglycerides, triglycerides, free and esterified ergosterol. Their percentage is influenced by the nutritional conditions. There is a significant increase of triglycerides and of sterol esters in the high lipid cells of series B.
  4. Methyl esters of component fatty acids of glycerides and sterol esters were analyzed by GLC. Saturated acids C14, C15, C16, C17, C18, monoenic acids C16 and C18, linoleic and linolenic acids were found to be present. Major acids were in all cases 18:1 (17–57%), 18:2 (18–50%) and 16:0 (10–18%). Linolenic acid is higher in di-and triglycerides of low lipid cells of series A than in high lipid cells of series B. Both qualitative and quantitative differences of fatty acids were found in sterol esters of series A and B respectively.
  5. The major components of complex lipids, identified by DC and isolated by CC, in both series, were phosphatidyl choline (A:36.5, B:41.0%) and phosphatidyl ethanolamine (A:24.9, B:20.5%) in addition to small amounts of lysophosphatidyl choline, lysophosphatidyl ethanolamine, phosphatidyl serine, monophosphoinositide, diphosphatidyl glycerol and, possibly cerebroside like substances.
  6. Methyl esters of the fatty acids of phosphatidyl choline and ethanolamine from both series were determined by GLC. In all samples 16:0, 18:0, 18:1, 18:2 and 18:3 acids were present besides of traces of 16:1 and 17:0. In contrast to neutral lipids the major acid of phospholipids is linoleic (53–58%), followed by oleic (8–24%) and linolenic acid (1–18%). The percentages of palmitic (4–8%) and stearic acids (tr.-1%) are small. Low lipid cells of series A differ from high lipid cells of series B by an increase of linolenic, and a decrease of linoleic acids, both in phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine.
  相似文献   

8.
Two green algae (Chlorella vulgaris and Scenedesmus obliquus) and four blue-green algae (Anacystis nidulans, Microcystis aeruginosa, Oscillatoria rubescens and Spirulina platensis) were grown in 81 batch cultures at different nitrogen levels. In all the algae increasing N levels led to an increase in the biomass (from 8 to 450 mg/l), in protein content (from 8 to 54 %) and in chlorophyll. At low N levels, the green algae contained a high percentage of total lipids (45 % of the biomass). More than 70 % of these were neutral lipids such as triacylglycerols (containing mainly 16:0 and 18:1 fatty acids) and trace amounts of hydrocarbons. At high N levels, the percentage of total lipids dropped to about 20 % of the dry weight. In the latter case the predominant lipids were polar lipids containing polyunsaturated C16 and C18 fatty acids. The blue-green algae, however, did not show any significant changes in their fatty acid and lipid compositions, when the nitrogen concentrations in the nutrient medium were varied. Thus the green but not the blue-green algae can be manipulated in mass cultures to yield a biomass with desired fatty acid and lipid compositions. The data may indicate a hitherto unrecognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms.  相似文献   

9.
Lipid composition and hydrocarbon structure of two colonial green algae of the genus Botryococcus, i.e., a museum strain and a field sample collected for the first time from Lake Shira (Khakasia, Siberia), have been compared. Polar lipids, diacylglycerols, alcohols, triacylglycerols, sterols, sterol esters, free fatty acids and hydrocarbons have been identified among lipids in the laboratory culture. The dominant fraction in the museum strain was formed by polar lipids (up to 50% of the lipids) made up of fatty acids from C12 to C24. Palmitic, oleic, C16 - C18 dienoic and trienoic acids were the main fatty acids of the museum strain. Aliphatic hydrocarbons were found in the lipid of the museum strain. However, these amounted maximally to about 1% of the dry biomass at the end of exponential growth phase. The qualitative and quantitative compositions of FAs and hydrocarbons of the museum strain of Botryococcus, (registered at the Cambridge collection as Botryococcus braunii Kutz No LB 807/1 Droop 1950 H-252) differed from those of the Botryococcus strain described in the literature as Botryococcus braunii. The Botryococcus sp. found in Lake Shira is characterized by a higher lipid content (<40% of the dry weight). Polar lipids, sterols, triacylglycerols, free fatty acids and hydrocarbons have been identified among lipids in the field sample. The main lipids in this sample were dienes and trienes (hydrocarbons <60% of total lipid). Monounsaturated and very long chain monounsaturated fatty acids, including C28:1 and C32:1 acids, were identified in the Botryococcus found in Lake Shira. The chemo-taxonomic criteria allow us to unequivocally characterize the organism collected from Lake Shira as Botryococcus braunii, race A.  相似文献   

10.
Batch cultures (8–32 l.) of Chlorella vulgaris and Scenedesmus obliquus and of Anacystis nidulans and Microcystis aeruginosa were grown in media containing 0.001 % KNO3 and at several stages in growth sampled for biomass, total protein, chlorophylls, lipids and fatty acids. With increasing time and decreasing nitrogen concentrations, the biomass of all of the algae increased, whereas the total protein and chlorophyll content dropped. Green and blue-green algae, however, behaved differently in their lipid metabolism. In the green algae the total lipid and fatty acid content as well as the composition of these compounds changed considerably during one growth phase and was dependent on the nitrogen concentration in the media at any given day of growth. More specifically, during the initial stages of growth the green algae produced larger amounts of polar lipids and polyunsaturated C16 and C18 fatty acids. Towards the end of growth, however, these patterns changed in that the main lipids of the green algae were neutral with mainly saturated fatty acids (mostly 18:1 and 16:0). Such changes did not occur in the blue-green algae. These differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic algae can possibly be explained by the ‘endosymbiont theory’.  相似文献   

11.
D.R. Body 《Phytochemistry》1974,13(8):1527-1530
The neutral lipids of white clover leaves and stems have been separated into wax esters, free fatty acids, free fatty alcohols, free sterols, triglycerides and hydrocarbons. The wax esters were mainly of C18 di- and tri-unsaturated fatty acids and C30 fatty alcohol. Linolenic acid was the predominant free fatty acid and triacontanol was the principal free fatty alcohol. Of the hydrocarbons, C29 and C31 were present in the largest amounts.  相似文献   

12.
Previous work from our laboratory has shown dinoflagellates, which possess the carotenoid peridinin, have been divided into two clusters based on plastid galactolipid fatty acid composition. In one cluster major forms of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG), lipids that comprise the majority of photosynthetic membranes, were C18/C18 (sn‐1/sn‐2), with octadecapentaenoic [18:5(n‐3)] and octadecatetraenoic [18:4(n‐3)] acid as principal fatty acids. The other cluster contained C20/C18 major forms, with eicosapentaenoic acid [20:5(n‐3)] being the predominant sn‐1 fatty acid. In this study, we have found that Symbiodinium microadriaticum isolated from the jellyfish, Cassiopea xamachana, when grown at 30°C, produced MGDG and DGDG with a more saturated fatty acid, 18:4(n‐3), at the sn‐2 carbon than when grown at 20°C where 18:5(n‐3) predominates. This modulation of the sn‐2 fatty acid's level of saturation is mechanistically similar to what has been observed in Pyrocystis, a C20/C18 dinoflagellate. We have also examined the effect of growth temperature on the betaine lipid, diacylglycerylcarboxyhydroxymethylcholine (DGCC), which has been observed by others to be the predominant non plastidial polar lipid in dinoflagellates. Temperature effects on it were minimal, with very few modulations in fatty acid unsaturation as observed in MGDG and DGDG. Rather, the primary difference seen at the two growth temperatures was the alteration of the amount of minor forms of DGCC, as well as a second betaine lipid, diacylglyceryl‐N,N,N‐trimethylhomoserine.  相似文献   

13.
The intensitive investigations on the lipid profile of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans at various culture ages suggest some correlations of the lipid constitutents with the membrane-bound iron oxidation system. Phosphatidic acid, phosphatidyl serine and phosphatidyl ethanolamine were the major polar components; hydrocarbon, triglyceride and diglyceride were the main neutral components. Major fatty acids were C16:0, C16:1, C16:3, C18:1, C18:3, C22:1 while C20:1, C20:2, C12:0, C14:2, C18:0, C18:2, C20:0, C22:0 were found in trace amounts which also depended upon the phase of the growth. One lipoamino acid was identified as ornithine lipid in the polar fraction. Each and every component varied to some extent at different growth phasesindicating relationship of these lipids to the iron oxidation system of the strain.  相似文献   

14.
Cold hardiness in the Arctic Collembola Megaphorura arctica (Tullberg), formerly Onychiurus arcticus, has been the subject of extensive studies over the last decade. This species employs an unusual strategy known as cryoprotective dehydration to survive winter temperatures as low as ?25 °C. To expand knowledge of cryoprotective dehydration in M. arctica, the present study investigates how a reduction in ambient temperature affects the fatty acid composition of the total body lipid content along with polar (mainly membrane phospholipids) and nonpolar (mainly triacylglycerols) lipids. Most ectothermic animals compensate for changes in fluidity by regulating fatty acid composition, a process often described as homeoviscous adaptation. In M. arctica, changes in the fatty acid composition of total body lipid content during cold treatment are only moderate, with no clear pattern emerging. However, the levels of unsaturated fatty acids in the polar lipids increase with cold exposure, largely attributable to 16 : 1(n? 7), 18 : 1(n? 9), 18 : 3(n? 6) and 18 : 3(n? 3), whereas unsaturated fatty acid levels in the nonpolar lipids correspondingly decrease. These results suggest a reallocation of fatty acids between the two lipid pools as a response to a temperature reduction of 6 °C. Because of hypometabolism, a characteristic of cold adaptation, such a mechanism could be less energy demanding than de novo synthesis of fatty acids and may comprise part of an adaptive homeostatic response.  相似文献   

15.
Tetraselmis sp. and Nannochloropsis oculata, cultivated in industrial‐scale bioreactors, produced 2.33 and 2.44% w/w lipid (calculated as the sum of fatty acid methyl esters) in dry biomass, respectively. These lipids contained higher amounts of neutral lipids and glycolipids plus sphingolipids, than phospholipids. Lipids of Tetraselmis sp. were characterized by the presence of eicosapentaenoic acid (that was located mainly in phospholipids), and octadecatetraenoic acid (that was equally distributed among lipid fractions), while these fatty acids were completely absent in N. oculata lipids. Additionally, lipids produced by 16 newly isolated strains from Greek aquatic environments (cultivated in flask reactors) were studied. The highest percentage of lipids was found in Prorocentrum triestinum (3.69% w/w) while the lowest in Prymnesium parvum (0.47% w/w). Several strains produced lipids rich in eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids. For instance, docosahexaenoic acid was found in high percentages in lipids of Amphidinium sp. S1, P. parvum, Prorocentrum minimum and P. triestinum, while lipids produced by Asterionella sp. (?) S2 contained eicosapentaenoic acid in high concentration. These lipids, containing ω‐3‐long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, have important applications in the food and pharmaceutical industries and in aquaculture.  相似文献   

16.
Higher lipid biosynthesis and accumulation are important to achieve economic viability of biofuel production via microalgae. To enhance lipid content, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was genetically engineered with a key enzyme diacylglycerol acyltransferase (BnDGAT2) from Brassica napus, responsible for neutral lipid biosynthesis. The transformed colonies harbouring aph7 gene, screened on hygromycin‐supplemented medium, achieved transformation frequency of ~120 ± 10 colonies/1 × 106 cells. Transgene integration and expression were confirmed by PCR, Southern blots, staining lipid droplets, proteins and spectro‐fluorometric analysis of Nile red‐stained cells. The neutral lipid is a major class (over 80% of total lipids) and most significant requirement for biodiesel production; this was remarkably higher in the transformed alga than the untransformed control. The levels of saturated fatty acids in the transformed alga decreased to about 7% while unsaturated fatty acids increased proportionately when compared to wild type cells. Polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially α‐linolenic acid, an essential omega‐3 fatty acid, were enhanced up to 12% in the transformed line. Nile red staining confirmed formation of a large number of lipid globules in the transformed alga. Evaluation of long‐term stability and vitality of the transgenic alga revealed that cryopreservation produced significantly higher quantity of lipid than those maintained continuously over 128 generations on solid medium. The overexpression of BnDGAT2 significantly altered the fatty acids profile in the transformed alga. Results of this study offer a valuable strategy of genetic manipulation for enhancing polyunsaturated fatty acids and neutral lipids for biofuel production in algae.  相似文献   

17.
1. Dietary deficiency of essential fatty acids results in a twofold increase in the neutral lipid content of liver mitochondria as compared with the corresponding value for stock-fed rats. 2. Deficiency produces changes in the pattern of the constituent fatty acids of the main phospholipid fractions of liver mitochondria which are similar to those previously reported for the lipids of whole liver. There is a fall in the content of C18:2 acid and to a smaller extent of C20:4 acid associated with a rise of C16:1, C18:1 and C20:3 acids. 3. Deficiency results in small decreases in the phosphorylation quotients of liver mitochondria during oxidation of succinate and pyruvate, but the values lie within the range reported for normal mitochondria. Mitochondrial respiration with succinate is decreased as a result of deficiency but no change was observed with pyruvate as substrate.  相似文献   

18.
Lipid profiles of three strains (Mexico, Australia, Japan) of Chattonella marina (Subrahmanyan) Hara et Chihara were studied under defined growth (phosphate, light, and growth phase) and harvest (intact and ruptured cells) conditions. Triacylglycerol levels were always <2%, sterols <7%, free fatty acids varied between 2 and 33%, and polar lipids were the most abundant lipid class (>51% of total lipids). The major fatty acids in C. marina were palmitic (16:0), eicosapentaenoic (EPA, 20:5ω3), octadecatetraenoic (18:4ω3), myristic (14:0), and palmitoleic (16:1ω7c) acids. Higher levels of EPA were found in ruptured cells (21.4–29.4%) compared to intact cells (8.5–25.3%). In general, Japanese N‐118 C. marina was the highest producer of EPA (14.3–29.4%), and Mexican CMCV‐1 the lowest producer (7.9–27.1%). Algal cultures, free fatty acids from C. marina, and the two aldehydes 2E,4E‐decadienal and 2E,4E‐heptadienal (suspected fatty acid‐derived products) were tested against the rainbow trout fish gill cell line RTgill‐W1. The configuration of fatty acids plays an important role in ichthyotoxicity. Free fatty acid fractions, obtained by base saponification of total lipids from C. marina showed a potent toxicity toward gill cells (median lethal concentration, LC50 (at 1 h) of 0.44 μg · mL?1 in light conditions, with a complete loss of viability at >3.2 μg · mL?1). Live cultures of Mexican C. marina were less toxic than Japanese and Australian strains. This difference could be related to differing EPA content, superoxide anion production, and cell fragility. The aldehydes 2E,4E‐decadienal and 2E,4E‐heptadienal also showed high impact on gill cell viability, with LC50 (at 1 h) of 0.34 and 0.36 μg · mL?1, respectively. Superoxide anion production was highest in Australian strain CMPL01, followed by Japanese N‐118 and Mexican CMCV‐1 strains. Ruptured cells showed higher production of superoxide anion compared to intact cells (e.g., 19 vs. 9.5 pmol · cell?1 · hr?1 for CMPL01, respectively). Our results indicate that C. marina is more ichthyotoxic after cell disruption and when switching from dark to light conditions, possibly associated with a higher production of superoxide anion and EPA, which may be quickly oxidized to produce more toxic derivates, such as aldehydes.  相似文献   

19.
Matured females of two Lake Baikal endemic fish species, Comephorus baicalensis and Comephorus dybowski, have been investigated for lipid of the whole body and specific tissues (liver, muscles, ovaries), phospholipid classes and fatty acids of neutral and polar lipids. Total lipid in the body (38.9% fresh weight), liver (23.5%) and muscles (14.5%) of C. baicalensis were greater than those of C. dybowski (4.7, 8.7 and 2.6%, respectively); only their ovaries were similar (5.3 and 5.6% lipid, respectively). In both species, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine were the major phospholipids, ranging from 60.7 to 75.1% of total phospholipid and 14.5–25.7%, respectively. In most cases, monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) were the major fatty acid group in C. baicalensis, whereas polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were the major group in C. dybowski. The MUFA 18:1(n-9) prevailed over other fatty acids in C. baicalensis and varied from 19% in polar lipids of muscles to 56.1% in neutral lipids of muscles. In polar lipid of C. dybowski, the PUFA 22:6(n-3) prevailed over other fatty acids in muscles and ovaries, while 16:0 dominated polar liver lipids and neutral lipids of all tissues. Other major fatty acids included 16:1(n-7), 18:1(n-7), and 20:5(n-3). Values of the (n-3)/(n-6) fatty acid ratio for neutral lipids of C. baicalensis (0.5–0.9) are well below the range of values characteristic either for marine or freshwater fish, while these values for polar lipids (1.6–1.8) are in the range typical of freshwater fish. Neutral lipid fatty acid ratios in C. dybowski (2.5–3.1) allow it to be assigned to freshwater fish, but polar lipids (2.8–3.7) leave it intermediary between freshwater and marine fish.  相似文献   

20.
Differences in viscoelasticity (η) and molecular mass (M) values, as well as in the fatty acid profile of lipids in DNA supramolecular complexes (SC), isolated from Pseudomonas aurantiaca cultures at the exponential and stationary growth phases, were established for the first time. Typical characteristics of DNA SC from actively growing cells were the following: η = 315 ± 15 dl/g, MDNA = 39 × 106 Da, C16:0 > C18:0 > C18:1 present as basic fatty acids (FA) in a pool of loosely DNA-bound lipids; the tightly DNA-bound lipid fraction consisted of only two acids C18:0 > C16:0. Significantly higher values of viscoelasticity η = 779 ± 8 dl/g and MDNA = 198 × 106 Da were observed for DNA SC of the stationary phase cells; one more FA, C14:0, was detected in the loosely bound lipid fraction, while lipids tightly bound to DNA contained mainly C16:0 > C18:1 > C18:0 > C14:0 FA. The content of saturated FA in the DNA-bound lipids in the stationary phase cells was twice as high than in the exponential phase cells. The fraction of tightly bound lipids from the stationary phase cells contained nine times more unsaturated fatty acids than the fraction from proliferating cells. These differences in FA composition of DNA-bound lipids demonstrate the importance of lipids for the structural organization and functioning of genomic DNA during bacterial culture development.  相似文献   

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