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Effect of temperature acclimatization on the fatty acid composition of goldfish intestinal lipids
Authors:P. Kemp and M. W. Smith
Affiliation:Departments of Biochemistry and Physiology, Agricultural Research Council Institute of Animal Physiology, Babraham, Cambridge, U.K.
Abstract:1. The fatty acid composition of whole goldfish, whole-intestinal mucosa, intestinal mucosal membranes and individual phospholipids extracted from mucosal membranes were measured, fish adapted to different temperatures being used. 2. Alterations of the adaptation temperature did not noticeably affect the fatty acid composition of the whole-fish lipids, but there were marked changes in the fatty acids of lipids extracted from homogenates of goldfish intestinal mucosa. These changes were more pronounced in a membrane fraction prepared from these homogenates. Raising the adaptation temperature by 20 degrees C halved the percentage of C(20:1), C(20:4) and C(22:6) fatty acids and nearly doubled the percentage of C(18:0) and C(20:3) fatty acids recovered. 3. Choline phosphoglycerides constituted about one-half and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides about one-quarter of the total membrane phospholipids. 4. The fatty acids of choline and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides were more susceptible to temperature-dependent changes than were the phosphoglycerides of inositol or serine. 5. The increase in C(18:0) fatty acid that occurred in membranes of warm-adapted fish was greatest for ethanolamine phosphoglycerides, but increases also occurred in other phospholipid fractions and in membrane neutral lipids.
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