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1.
Fatty acid biosynthesis in the leaves of barley, wheat and pea.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
1. The incorporation of radioactivity from [1-14C]acetate into the leaf lipids of barley, pea and wheat has been studied in pulse-labelling experiments. 2. There was little increase in the total labelling of lipids after the leaves were transferred to non-radioactive medium. However, there was an increase in the relative labelling of unsaturated fatty acids. In addition, there was an increase in the relative labelling of diacylgalactosylglycerol. 3. The principal radioactively labelled acyl lipids were diacylgalactosylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidylcholine showed a decreasing proportion of [14C]oleate and an increasing amount of [14C]linoleate with time. Diacylgalactosylglycerol also had decreasing amounts of [14C]oleate but, in addition, had an increasing proportion of [14C]linolenate with time. 4. The absence of significant amounts of [14C]linolenate in phosphatidylcholine appeared to exclude a role for this phospholipid in linoleate desaturation. 5. The specific radioactivities of oleate and linoleate in phosphatidylcholine, diacylgalactosylglycerol and diacylgalabiosylglycerol were very similar in any single experiment. It was concluded that these fatty acids can rapidly exchange between the three intact lipids.  相似文献   

2.
Diacylgalactosylglycerol synthesis was a prerequisite for the incorporation of [1-14C]-acetate into linoleate and alpha-linolenate of isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts. Oleate at position 1 of diacylgalactosylglycerol was desaturated to linoleate and alpha-linolenate both in the light and in the dark. Some desaturation of palmitate was also observed after prolonged incubations.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of a substituted pyridazinone (4-chloro-5(dimethylamino)-2-phenyl-3(2H)pyridazinone; Sandoz 9785; BASF 13-338) on the formation of fatty acids from radiolabelled precursors has been studied in a number of angiosperms, bryophytes and algae. The labelling of [14C]linolenic acid was decreased by the herbicide in leaves of barley and rye grass and in cucumber cotyledons regardless of whether [14C]acetate,[14C]oleate or [14C]linoleate was used as precursor. A commensurate increase in the labelling of [14C]linoleic acid was also observed in these species. In contrast, the pattern of fatty acid labelling in maize, pea and spinach leaves was unaffected by 0.1 mM Sandoz 9785. More generalized inhibition of the incorporation of radioactivity from [14C]acetate into the fatty acids of bryophytes and algae was seen. Sandoz 9785 did not alter the distribution of radioactivity in different lipid classes of higher plant leaves, nor did it change the proportions of radioactive fatty ac ids in phosphatidylcholine. In contrast to phosphatidylcholine, which never contained more than trace amounts of [14C]linolenate, diacylgalactosylglycerol contained high levels of the radioactive acid. The relative labelling of linolenate was severely reduced in diacylgalactosylglycerol by Sandoz 9785 in sensitive angiosperms. Uptake studies, in which [3H]Sandoz 9785 was employed demonstrated that the uptake of Sandoz 9785 was reflection of water uptake. Following its uptake, Sandoz 9785 was rapidly converted into other compounds in pea but only gradually metabolized in cucumber and ryegrass. The results are interpreted as showing, firstly, that the different sensitivity of higher plants to Sandoz 9785 is due to variations both in uptake and in metabolism. Secondly, Sandoz 9785 specifically inhibits the desaturation of linoleate to linolenate and, thirdly, diacylgalactosylglycerol plays a role in this conversion.  相似文献   

4.
The patterns of incorporation of [l-14C]-acetate into the glycerolipid fatty acids of leaves of olive plants ( Olea europea L. cv. Chétoui) suggested a specific pathway for a-linolenic acid biosynthesis. The results confirmed the involvement of phosphati-dylcholine in galactolipid metabolism, and seemed to exclude the role of that mole-cule as a substrate for desaturation of oleate to linoleate. The two oleate desaturation steps seemed to occur rapidly on the diacylgalactosylglycerol molecule for biosynthesis of galactolipid linolenate. In addition, the results indicated a slow sequen-tial desaturation of oleate to linolenate via linoleate in the phospholipid molecules (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol).  相似文献   

5.
Callus cultures from olive (Olea europaea L.) were used to study characteristics of desaturation in this oil-rich tissue. The incorporation of [1-(14)C]oleate and [1-(14)C]linoleate into complex lipids and their further desaturation was followed in incubations of up to 48 h. Both radiolabelled fatty acids were rapidly incorporated into lipids, especially phosphatidylcholine and triacylglycerol. Radiolabelling of these two lipids peaked after 1-4 h, after which it fell. In contrast, other phosphoglycerides and the galactosylglycerides were labelled in a more sustained manner. [1-(14)C]Linoleate was almost exclusively found in the galactolipids. With [1-(14)C]linoleate as a precursor, the only significant desaturation to linolenate was in the galactolipids. Monogalactosyldiacylglycerol was the first lipid in which [1-(14)C]linoleate and [1-(14)C]linolenate appeared after incubation of the calli with [1-(14)C]oleate and [1-(14)C]linoleate, respectively. The presence of radioactivity in the plastidial lipids shows that both [1-(14)C]oleate and [1-(14)C]linoleate can freely enter the chloroplast. Two important environmental effects were also examined. Raised incubation temperatures (30-35 degrees C) reduced oleate desaturation and this was also reflected in the endogenous fatty acid composition. Low light also caused less oleate desaturation. The data indicate that lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase is important for the entry of oleate and linoleate into olive callus lipid metabolism and phospholipid:diacylglycerol acyltransferase may be involved in triacylglycerol biosynthesis. In addition, it is shown that plastid desaturases are mainly responsible for the production of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Individual fatty acid desaturases were differently susceptible to environmental stresses with FAD2 being reduced by both high temperature and low light, whereas FAD7 was only affected by high temperature.  相似文献   

6.
[1-14C]Oleic and [1-14C]linoleic acids were rapidly desaturated when incubated with maize leaves from 8-day-old plants and the labeled fatty acids, and their desaturation products, were rapidly incorporated into glycerolipids. Oleic acid was desaturated to linoleate at the rate of 0.7 nmol/100 mg tissue/h and further desaturated to linolenate at about one-third this rate. The rates of linolenate formation were similar when either oleic acid or linoleic acid was the substrate although there was a 2-h lag period when oleic acid was substrate. When radioactive oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids were substrates, phosphatidylcholine was the most extensively labeled glycerolipid followed by monogalactosyldiacylglycerol. The relative rates of incorporation of label into individual glycerolipids are consistent with a movement of labeled fatty acids from phosphatidylcholine to monogalactosyldiacylglycerol and then to diagalactosyldiacylglycerol. The rates of labeling of phosphatidylcholine oleate and of phosphatidylcholine linoleate are consistent with a precursor-product relationship in that there was a delayed accumulation of phosphatidylcholine linoleate relative to that of phosphatidylcholine oleate and phosphatidylcholine linoleate continued to accumulate while phosphatidylcholine oleate declined. Linoleate formed from oleate was widely distributed in glycerolipids but neither phosphatidylcholine linolenate nor linolenate-containing diacylglycerol was detected at short and intermediate incubation times when either oleic or linoleic acid was substrate. The kinetics of incorporation of linoleate and linolenate into monogalactosyldiacylglycerol suggest a transfer of linoleate from phosphatidylcholine. The initial rate of accumulation of labeled linolenate in monogalactosyldiacylglycerol was very similar to the rate of desaturation of linoleate and it is suggested that desaturation of linoleate occurs while associated with monogalactosyl-diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

7.
Hans Kleinig  Bodo Liedvogel 《Planta》1979,144(5):473-477
The coronae of Narcissus pseudonarcissus flowers incorporated [1-14C]acetate almost exclusively into the fatty acid moieties of glycerolipids. After a 4 h incubation, the newly synthesized acids were: stearate plus palmitate (50%); oleate (17%); linoleate (32%); and linolenate (0.5%). Phosphatidylcholine and diacylglycerol were the principal labelled lipids. In pulse experiments these acids were further desaturated, with time, to an appreciable extent and, concurrently, transferred essentially from phosphatidylcholine to diacylglycerol, diacylgalactosylglycerol, and diacylgalabiosylglycerol. The labelling of diacylgalactosylglycerol and diacylgalabiosylglycerol paralleled the appearance of linolenate. The distribution of labelled acids in phosphatidylcholine, diacylgalactosylglycerol, and diacylgalabiosylglycerol was very different. The results were compared with those obtained in vitro with isolated coronae chromoplasts and discussed in relation to current schemes of fatty acid and glycerolipid synthesis in plant cells.  相似文献   

8.
Hawke JC  Stumpf PK 《Plant physiology》1980,65(6):1027-1030
Oleate and linoleate desaturation in leaves of maize seedlings was largely independent of previous light treatment of the seedlings; there was no evidence of light-induced desaturase activities. These results are in sharp contrast to those observed with developing cucumber cotyledons in which pronounced increase in desaturation occurs after exposure of tissue to light. The rates of desaturation of oleate were about four times those of linoleate in both etiolated and 16-hour greened maize leaves. In both etiolated and greened tissues, about two-thirds of the label from oleate was esterified after 4 hours, half of which was in phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidylcholine and diglyceride contained large proportions of [14C]linoleate formed from [14C]oleate but not [14C]linolenate. In monogalactolipid, about two-thirds of the labeled fatty acids were linolenate. In vivo desaturase activity was present in tissue of widely different levels of differentiation and chlorophyll content obtained from light-grown maize seedlings.  相似文献   

9.
Evidence was obtained that Penicillium chrysogenum can produce linolenate by two biosynthetic pathways, i.e., by elongation of a shorter trienoic acid as well as direct desaturation of 18-C acids. In oxygen deficient cultures, exogenous hexadecatrienoate stimulated [1-14C]acetate incorporation into labeled octadecatrienoate and [U-14C]hexadecatrienoate with nonlabeled acetate yielded linolenate that had relatively little label in the 1-C position. With [1-14C]acetate as the only added substrate, oxygen deficiency inhibited incorporation of label into monoenoic and dienoic acids but not into trienoic acids. Incorporation of the [U-14C]linoleate into linolenate also was inhibited.In aerated cultures, 1-14C-label from laurate, palmitate, stearate, oleate, linoleate, and hexadecatrienoate was readily incorporated into linolenate. Decarboxylation and oxidation studies indicated that the longer acids were incorporated largely intact. [U-14C]Linoleate was incorporated into linolenate in which the fraction of label in 1-C was similar to that of the substrate. These data suggest that this mold has broader synthetic capabilities than do some chloroplast systems for the biosynthesis of linolenate.  相似文献   

10.
Incorporation of exogenous [14C] arachidonate by human skin fibroblasts was found to be significantly greater than that of either [14C]linoleate or alpha-[14C] linolenate. Arachidonate was preferentially esterified in the PI + PS and PE classes of phospholipids. Over 40% of the incorporated [14C] arachidonate was chain elongated in 24 hours. Cells were also grown in lipid-free medium to enhance PUFA desaturation and elongation and the utilization of various omega 6 and omega 3 metabolites examined. Whereas [14C] linoleate partitioned approximately 50:50 between PL and TAG, eicosatrienoate (20:3 omega 6) was selectively sequestered in TAG. Arachidonate and docosatetraenoate (22:4 omega 6) were preferentially incorporated into phospholipids; the PI + PS fraction was most highly enriched with arachidonate. Modification of alpha-[14C] linolenate was more extensive than that of [14C] linoleate. Docosapentaenoate (22:5 omega 3) was the major omega 3 [14C] PUFA of PI + PS and PE. Eicosapentaeonate was not selectively incorporated into phospholipids; within phospholipids the 20:5 omega 3 was primarily in PC. These results indicate that human skin fibroblasts exhibit acyl specificity in the esterification of polyunsaturated fatty acids, including preferential utilization of arachidonate rather than other prostaglandin precursors in the PI + PS fraction.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of the substituted pyridazinone herbicides, Sandoz9785 and Sandoz 6706, on lipid metabolism was studied in greeningbarley leaves. The herbicides had no effect on chlorophyll formationbut caused an altered chloroplast morphology during greening.In leaves supplied with {14C} acetate, Sandoz 9785 decreasedincorporation of radioactivity into linolenate while Sandoz6706 decreased incorporation into both linolenate and trans-3-hexadecenoate.Decreased linolenate labelling was accompanied by an accumulationof {14C}linolenate in diacylgalactosylglycerol. {14C}Palmitateaccumulated in phosphatidylglycerol when synthesis of trans-3-hexadecenoatewas inhibited. The results are discussed in relation to thefunction of acyl lipids in fatty acid desaturation and the roleof lipids in chloroplast morphology. Key words: Chloroplast structure, Lipid synthesis, Substituted pyridazinones, Fatty acid desaturation  相似文献   

12.
1. The patterns of incorporation of (14)C into glycerolipid fatty acids of developing maize leaf lamina from supplied [1-(14)C]acetate and from (14)CO(2) during steady-state photosynthesis were similar. Oleate of phosphatidylcholine and palmitate of phosphatidylglycerol attained linear rates of labelling more rapidly than did other fatty acids, particularly the linoleate and linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol. 2. After the transfer of lamina from labelled to unlabelled acetate, there was a decrease in labelled oleate and linoleate of phosphatidylcholine and a concomitant increase in the amount of radioactivity in the linoleate and linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol. 3. The rapidly labelled phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol, were shown by differential and sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation to be associated with different organelles, the former being mainly in a low-density membrane fraction, probably microsomal, and the latter mainly in chloroplasts. 4. During a 48h period after supplying spinach leaves with [(14)C]acetate, radioactivity was lost from the oleate of phosphatidylcholine present in fractions sedimented at 12000g and 105000g, and accumulated in the linolenate of monogalactosyl diacylglycerol of the chloroplast. 5. It is proposed that the phosphatidylcholine of some non-plastid membranes is intimately involved in the process of oleate desaturation and that this lipid serves as a donor of unsaturated C(18) fatty acids to other lipids, principally monogalactosyl diacylglycerol, of the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of water stress on [1-14C]-oleic and [1-14C]-linoleic acid desaturations were studied in leaves of two varieties of cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum L.), one drought-sensitive (Reba) and the other more resistant (Mocosinho). After 24 h incorporation, [1-14C]-oleate led to the appearance of linoleate in phospholipids and, additionally, of linolenate in galactolipids. [1-14C]-Linoleate was desaturated to linolenate only in galactolipid fractions. Water stress markedly inhibited the incorporation of the precursors into the leaf lipids. The two desaturation steps were affected, particularly the transformation of linoleate to linolenate in monogalactosyldiacylglycerol in the drought-sensitive variety of cotton. The metabolic implications of the inhibition of the biosynthesis of C18-polyunsaturated fatty acids are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Etiolated Cucumis sativus L. cotyledons preferentially catabolized exogenous [1-14C]oleic acid and [1-14C]linoleic acid with relatively little incorporation into complex lipids or desaturation of the 14C-labeled fatty acids. Following a 16-hour exposure to light, the greening cotyledons efficiently desaturated the exogenous 14C-labeled fatty acids. A small amount of oleate desaturation to linoleate was observed in etiolated tissue, but hardly any linoleate desaturation to α-linolenate was detected. Both oleate and linoleate desaturation showed diurnal variations with maxima at the end of light periods and minima at the end of dark periods. Illumination of etiolated tissue by flashing light, as opposed to continuous light, failed to stimulate either chlorophyll or α-linolenic acid biosynthesis, and both processes could be halted or reversed by 10 micrograms per milliliter cycloheximide. Production of polyunsaturated fatty acids from [1-14C]acetate, [1-14C]oleic acid, and [1-14C]linoleic acid, by greening cucumber cotyledons, was markedly affected by tissue integrity with finely chopped cotyledons having very little capacity for their synthesis and intact seedlings showing the highest rates.  相似文献   

15.
Liu L  Hammond EG  Nikolau BJ 《Plant physiology》1997,113(4):1343-1349
In vivo radiotracer experiments using 14C-labeled acetate, oleate, linoleate, and linolenate were conducted to investigate the biosynthesis of [alpha]-eleostearic acid in the seeds of Momordica charantia. With the exception of [14C]linolenate, all of these precursors radioactively labeled [alpha]-eleostearate. Kinetics of the time course of metabolism of the radioactive precursors indicate that linoleate is the acyl precursor of [alpha]-eleostearate and that its conversion to [alpha]-eleostearate occurs while the acyl moiety is esterified to PC. Pulse-chase experiments with 14C-labeled acetate or linoleate provided additional corroborative evidence that linoleoyl PC is the precursor of [alpha]-eleostearoyl PC.  相似文献   

16.
Metabolism of exogenous long-chain fatty acids by spinach leaves   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
When applied in liquid paraffin to the upper surface of expanding spinach leaves, [1-14C]palmitic acid was efficiently and exclusively incorporated into the sn-1 position of cellular glycerolipids, principally phosphatidylcholine and triacylglycerol. A slow transfer of fatty acids from phosphatidylcholine to chloroplast glycolipids subsequently occurred with the positional specificity of the label remaining intact. Labeled palmitate at the sn-1 position of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol was desaturated to hexadecatrienoate so that 1-[14C]hexadecatrienoyl-2-linolenoyl-3-galactosoylglycerol became the major labeled species of the lipid between 8 and 24 h. There was no evidence of deacylation/reacylation reactions modifying the acyl compositions of spinach leaf glycerolipids for at least 48 h after labeling with [1-14C]palmitic acid; even the partially prokaryotic glycerolipids remained firmly labeled at the sn-1 position. Exogenous [1-14C]stearic acid was also incorporated into the sn-1 position of MGD, presumably by the same mechanism, and was there desaturated to [14C]linolenate. Exogenous [1-14C]oleic acid was initially incorporated equally into both sn-1 and sn-2 positions of phosphatidylcholine, and was desaturated to linoleate at both positions before the label was rapidly transferred to monogalactosyldiacylglycerol. There, desaturation of linoleate to linolenate took place. Galactolipids remained equally labeled at both positions throughout the 6 days of the experiment, but label was concentrated in the 1-saturated-2-[14C]linolenoyl molecular species of phosphatidylcholine as those species with two [14C]linoleoyl residues were drawn off for monogalactolipid synthesis. Glycerolipids synthesised from exogenous [1-14C]acetate by spinach leaves were labeled equally at both the sn-1 and the sn-2 positions. These results are interpreted as providing strong support for the two-pathway scheme of glycerolipid synthesis in plants.  相似文献   

17.
A substituted pyridazinone (BASF 13-338) inhibited photosynthesis in spinach (Spinacia oleracea, Hybrid 102 Arthur Yates Ltd.) leaf discs and reduced the incorporation of [1-14C]acetate into trienoic acids of diacylgalactosylglycerol while causing radioactivity to accumulate in diacylgalac-tosylglycerol dienoic acids. Although BASF 13-338 inhibited photosynthesis in isolated spinach chloroplasts, it did not prevent dienoate desaturation. In discs, the labeling of fatty acids was affected by the inhibitor only in diacylgalactosylglycerol. Very little radioactivity was incorporated into trienes of phosphatidylcholine and the proportion of the label recovered in the fatty acids of phosphatidylcholine was not changed by BASF 13-338. The herbicides caused an increase in the proportion of the lipid 14C incorporated into diacylgalactosylglycerol and a decrease in labeling of phosphatidylcholine, whereas the proportion of 14C recovered in other lipids remained unchanged. Similar results were obtained with pea (Pisum sativum cv. Victory Freeze), linseed (Linum usitatissimum cv. Punjab), and wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Karamu). With these species, a greater proportion of the label was incorporated into phosphatidylcholine and less into diacylgalactosylglycerol than with spinach. The data indicate that trienoate synthesis uses diacylgalactosylglycerol as substrate. BASF 13-338 appears to act at that step, and seems to cause in spinach a shift in polyenoate synthesis from the pathway involving microsomal phosphatidylcholine to the pathway operating inside the chloroplast.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT. Major fatty acid components of Acanthamoeba castellanii lipids extracted after growth at 30°C include myristate, palmitate, stearate and the polyunsaturates linoleate, eicosadienoate, eicosatrienoate and arachidonate, with oleate as the sole major monounsaturated fatty acid. By comparison, growth at 15°C gave increased linoleate, eicosatrienoate and arachidonate, but decreased oleate and palmitate. When the growth temperature was shifted downwards from 30°C to 15°C, increased lipid unsaturation occurred over a period of 24 h; thus decreases of oleate and eicosadienoate were accompanied by increases in linoleate, eicosatrienoate, arachidonate and eicosapentaenoate. An upwards shift from 15°C to 30°C gave negligible alterations in fatty acid composition over a similar period. At 15°C organisms rapidly use [1-14C] acetate for de novo fatty acid synthesis; stearate is converted via oleate to further desaturation and chain elongation products. Similar short term experiments at 30°C indicate only de novo synthesis and Δ9-desaturation; synthesis of polyunsaturates was a much slower process. Rapid incorporation of [1-14C] oleate at 30°C was not accompanied by metabolic conversion over two hours, whereas at 15°C n-6 desaturation to linoleate was observed. Temperature shift of organisms from 15°C to 30°C in the presence of [1-14C] acetate revealed that over half of the fatty acids in newly-synthesised lipids were saturated, but the proportions of unsaturated fatty acids increased with time until the total polyenoate components reached 17% after 22 h. A shift of temperature in the reverse direction gave a corresponding figure of 60% for polyunsaturated fatty acids. These results emphasize the importance of n-6 desaturation in the low temperature adaptation of Acanthamoeba castellanii .  相似文献   

19.
To investigate the incorporation of essential fatty acids into myelin components, 24-day-old rabbits were injected intracerebrally with [14C]linoleate, [14C]linolenate, or [3H]Myristate for comparison. Animals were killed 22 hr later and myelin was isolated. [3H]myristate labeled all myelin lipids including monogalactosyl diglyceride, with the exception of sulfatides. With14C-essential fatty acids, only glycerophospholipids were efficiently labeled and their specific activities were in the following decreasing orders: PC>PI>PE>PS with [14C]linoleate, and PE>PC>PI=PS with [14C]linolenate. Among myelin proteins, PLP and DM-20 were labeled with all 3 precursors. PLP was purified from myelin labeled with14C-essential fatty acids. The label was then cleaved from the protein by alkaline methanolysis and was identified as a dienoic ([14C]linoleate) or a tetraenoic ([14C]linolenate) fatty acid. MBP was not labeled with [3H]myristate, but was slightly labeled with both14C-essential fatty acids. The signification of the latter result is discussed.Abbreviations FA fatty acid(s) - HPTLC high-performance thin-layer chromatography - MBP myelin basic protein - PLP proteolipid protein - PC phosphatidylcholine - PE phosphatidylethanolamine and ethanolamine plasmalogens - PI phosphatidylinositol - PS phosphatidylserine - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate  相似文献   

20.
Etiolated barley leaves when exposed to light desaturate oleate-[14C] to linoleate. The production of substantial amounts of radioactive linolenate was found only in very young, tightly rolled leaves. In oleate-[14C] pulse experiments, radioactive linolenate first appeared in phosphatidylcholine (PC) and only after a lag period did it begin to accumulate in monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG). The results indicate that in young, immature barley leaves linolenate is synthesized from oleate on the parent lipid, PC, and is then transferred to MGDG.  相似文献   

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