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Lipid requirement for cell cycling : The effect of selective inhibition of lipid synthesis
Authors:Rosemary Cornell  G L Grove  G H Rothblat  A F Horwitz
Abstract:Tissue culture cells require lipid which must be provided exogenously or synthesized via endogenous pathways. The exogenous supplies can be largely removed by growing cells in medium containing delipidized serum. Pathways for synthesis of lipid can then be blocked at three steps: (1) fatty acids by removal of biotin, an essential coenzyme; (2) phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin by deleting choline from the growth medium; and (3) cholesterol by inhibiting HMG-CoA reductase with 25-hydroxycholesterol. Sustained proliferation is prevented when lipid synthesis is blocked at any one of these steps. Cell proliferation resumes upon restoring synthesis with biotin, choline, or mevalonate (the product of the HMG-CoA reductase reaction) or by providing the lipid end products oleic acid or cholesterol. Using a combined cytophotometric-autoradiographic analysis to determine cell cycle distributions we have demonstrated that prereplicative (G1) cell cycle arrests develop in parallel with the proliferative inhibition. Each of the G1 arrests can be reversed by restoring the synthetic pathways or their lipid products. These observations suggest a causal relationship between the supply of lipids and passage through G1.
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