Prostanoid synthesis in whole blood cells from fish of the Arabian Gulf |
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Authors: | Martha Thomson Jassim M Al-Hassan Jinan Al-Saleh Sanaa' Fayad Muslim Ali |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Kuwait University, P.O. Box 5969, 13060-Safat, Kuwait |
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Abstract: | The ability to synthesise prostaglandins and thromboxane from 14C-labelled arachidonic acid was investigated in 11 species of fish from the Arabian Gulf. Cyclooxygenase activity was assessed in washed whole blood cells. Arachidonic acid and its metabolites were extracted and separated on silicic acid columns and thin layer chromatography (silica gel G). Total capacity to convert [14C]arachidonic acid to prostanoids varied from 1 to 35% among the 11 fish species studied. Gray shark (Chiloscyllium griseum) blood cells had the highest capacity (37±0.4%) to convert arachidonate into prostanoids and two species of catfish (Arius bilineatus and A. thalassinus) exhibited greater than 10% capacity to convert [14C]arachidonate into prostanoids. The major prostanoid synthesised by the two catfish (A. bilineatus and A thalassinus) was 6-keto PGF1α, a stable metabolite of prostacyclin, PGI2. In contrast, A. teunispinis synthesised thromboxane B2, a stable metabolite of thromboxane A2. Thromboxane B2 (TXB2) was the major product synthesised by all three species of shark studied (Chil. griseum, Carcharhinus plumbeus, Carch. melanopterus), with 6-keto PGF1α a minor product. Other fish studied showed a varied pattern of prostanoid synthesis. The synthesis of these prostanoids was almost completely blocked by preincubation of the whole blood cells from catfish and shark with indomethacin (0.5 μM) suggesting the involvement of cyclooxygenase-mediated prostanoid synthesis. |
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Keywords: | Prostaglandins Thromboxane Fish Arabian Gulf Blood cells |
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