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Arachidonoyl transacylase in human platelets. Coenzyme A-independent transfer of arachidonate from phosphatidylcholine to lysoplasmenylethanolamine
Authors:R M Kramer  D Deykin
Abstract:Human platelets contain an enzyme that catalyzes CoA-independent release of arachidonic acid from phosphatidylcholine with concomitant incorporation into plasmenylethanolamine. Addition of lysoplasmenylethanolamine (10-80 microM) to a crude membrane preparation of prelabeled platelets (0.24 mg of protein/ml) induces transfer of 3H]arachidonate from endogenous phosphatidylcholine to lysoplasmenylethanolamine (0.8 nmol of arachidonic acid/min/mg of protein). The transacylation reaction occurs in the absence of Ca2+, has a broad pH optimum from 7 to 8, is not affected by excess unlabeled arachidonic acid, and is inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide (0.2 mM) and Triton X-100 (0.1 mg/ml). The enzyme shows a high specificity toward the acyl donor (phosphatidylcholine), transfers fatty acids in the order: arachidonic greater than eicosatrienoic greater than oleic, and preferentially acylates lysoplasmenylethanolamine but also other lysophosphatides (lysophosphatidylethanolamine greater than lysophosphatidylserine greater than lysophosphatidylinositol = 0). Platelet acyltransferase, on the other hand, acylates ethanolamine lysophosphatides with free arachidonic acid in the order: lysophosphatidyl-ethanolamine greater than lysoplasmenylethanolamine. These results suggest that a distinct acylation mechanism exists for introduction of arachidonic acid into plasmalogen phosphatides. In stimulated platelets, the transacylase may play an additional role in the controlled release of esterified arachidonic acid for synthesis of the biologically active oxygenated metabolites.
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