首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The Effect of Dietary Sterol on the Activity of Fatty Acid Desaturases Isolated from Tetrahymena setosa
Authors:MARYANNE KOLL  JOSEPH A. ERWIN
Affiliation:Chicago Board of Health, Dalcy Center, Chicago, Illinois 60602 and Department of Biology. Life Sciences Building, Ilinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616
Abstract:Tetrahymena setosa has a nutritional requirement for micro amounts of sterol, a requirement which is also satisfied by relatively large amounts of either intact phospholipids or a mixture of unsaturated fatty acids normally found in these ciliates. Three microsomal fatty acyl-CoA desaturases have been isolated from T. setosa and partially characterized. These enzymes which can account for the formation of the majority of the ciliate's unsaturated fatty acids, include: a Δ9, a Δ12 and a Δ6 desaturase which catalyze the transformation of stearoyl-CoA to oleic acid, of oleoyl-CoA to linoleic acid and of linoleoyl-CoA to ?-linolenic acid, respectively. The stearoyl CoA desaturase required NAD (or NADP), ATP and free CoA; the Δ6 and Δ12 desaturases required NADP, but not ATP or CoA. Cellular levels of the three desaturases were highest in mid-logarithmic phase cells and lowest in stationary phase cells. In order to determine if there was a relationship between the sterol requirement and the ability of the organism to desaturate, T. setosa was grown in a synthetic medium supplemented with either cholesterol or a phospholipid which permits growth in the absence of cholesterol, or with both phospholipid and cholesterol. Cells grown with phospholipid alone had only half as much stearoyl-CoA and oleoyl-CoA desaturase activity as cells of identical culture age grown either on cholesterol alone or on cholesterol plus phospholipid.
Keywords:Cholesterol    cofactors    desaturase    fatty acid    modulator    Tetrahymena setosa.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号