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THE INCORPORATION OF [1-14C]LINOLENATE INTO LIPIDS OF DEVELOPING RAT BRAIN DURING ESSENTIAL FATTY ACID DEPRIVATION
Authors:Barney  Dwyer Joseph  Bernsohn
Institution:Neuropsychiatric Research Laboratory, Veterans Administration Hospital, Hines, IL 60141, U.S.A. and Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract— Twenty-one-day old essential fatty acid (EFA) deprived rats incorporated about twice the radioactivity from 1-14C]linolenate into brain lipid fractions as did controls. At 5 min after injection, 2/3 of the radioactivity was associated with the less polar lipid fraction of both control and EFA deprived animals. By 30 min after injection, 70% of the radioactivity was in the phospholipid fraction. This value increased to 90% at later time points.
The specific activity of brain phospholipids from EFA deprived rats was always greater than that of controls. This held true for the individual phosphatide fractions also. In general, phosphatidylcholine (PC) was labeled most rapidly. With increasing time intervals, radioactivity was transferred to phospha-tidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine + phosphatidylinositol (PS + PI).
The transfer of fatty acid radioactivity into phospholipid and the distribution of radioactivity among individual phosphatides did not appear to be affected by the dietary state. However, the total amount of radioactivity incorporated was related to the amount initially retained by brain after injection. Our data suggest that one or more components of the less polar lipid fraction may act as a 'trap' or reservoir for fatty acids which are required for phospholipid synthesis.
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