» Articles » PMID: 1627614

Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Incorporation into Plasmalogens in Plasma Membrane of Glioma Cells is Preceded Temporally by Acylation in Microsomes

Overview
Specialties Biochemistry
Biophysics
Date 1992 Jun 22
PMID 1627614
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Plasmalogens (1-O-alk-1'-enyl-2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine) are major phospholipids in many tissues and cells, particularly of neural origin. Using cultured C6 glioma cells and subcellular fractions isolated on Percoll gradients we investigated selectivity for esterification of several polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in the sn-2 position of plasmalogens compared to [1-14C]hexadecanol, representative of de novo synthesis of the ether-linked sn-1 position. In whole cells at a final concentration of 105 microM PUFA, 2-4 nmol plasmalogen/mg protein was labeled in 4 h and 10-14 nmol in 24 h, representing 8-15% and 35-50%, respectively, of initial plasmalogen mass. Incorporation of label from hexadecanol was lower than PUFA incorporation (20:5(n-3) greater than 20:4(n-6) greater than 18:3(n-3) much greater than 18:2(n-6)) suggesting deacylation-reacylation at the sn-2 position. Plasmalogens accounted for 50% of total cell ethanolamine phospholipids and 75% in plasma membrane. Using a novel, improved method for extraction of subcellular fractions containing Percoll, plasma membrane also was enriched in plasmalogen relative to microsomes (107.4 +/- 5.2 vs. 40.0 +/- 2.9 nmol/mg protein). Selectivity for esterification at the sn-2 position of plasmalogens with respect to chain length and unsaturation of the fatty acyl chain was similar in both subcellular fractions and reflected that of whole cells. Labeling of plasma membrane with PUFA and fatty alcohol lagged behind that of microsomes. Chase experiments in cells prelabeled with [1-14C]18:3(n-3) for 2 h showed no significant reduction of label in plasmalogen of any subcellular fraction although accumulation of label in the microsomal fraction was slowed initially. Reduction of plasmalogen label (40-50%) did occur in microsomes and plasma membrane when cells prelabeled for 24 h were switched to chase medium with or without chase fatty acid. Our data suggest that esterification of PUFA to plasmalogen may occur at the endoplasmic reticulum with subsequent translocation to plasma membrane resulting in accumulation of relatively stable pools of plasmalogen that are not readily accessible for deacylation-reacylation exchange with newly appearing PUFA. Alternatively, deacylation-reacylation may occur in a more stable phospholipid pool within the plasma membrane but would involve a slower process than at the endoplasmic reticulum.

Citing Articles

Consumption of a high-fat diet alters transcriptional rhythmicity in liver from pubertal mice.

Yan L, Sundaram S, Rust B, Palmer D, Johnson L, Zeng H Front Nutr. 2023; 9:1068350.

PMID: 36687679 PMC: 9845732. DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2022.1068350.


Effects of maturation on the phospholipid and phospholipid fatty acid compositions in primary rat cortical astrocyte cell cultures.

Murphy E, Rosenberger T, Horrocks L Neurochem Res. 1997; 22(10):1205-13.

PMID: 9342724 DOI: 10.1023/a:1021924711675.


Differential alterations of ethanolamine and choline phosphoglyceride metabolism by clofibrate and retinoic acid in human fibroblasts are not mediated by phorbol ester-sensitive protein kinase C.

Mandla S, Byers D, Ridgway N, Cook H Lipids. 1996; 31(7):747-55.

PMID: 8827698 DOI: 10.1007/BF02522891.


Phorbol ester stimulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis in four cultured neural cell lines: correlations with expression of protein kinase C isoforms.

Sproull S, Morash S, Byers D, Palmer BStC , Cook H Neurochem Res. 1995; 20(12):1397-407.

PMID: 8789601 DOI: 10.1007/BF00970587.


Serine and ethanolamine incorporation into different plasmalogen pools: subcellular analyses of phosphoglyceride synthesis in cultured glioma cells.

Xu Z, Byers D, Palmer F, Cook H Neurochem Res. 1994; 19(6):769-75.

PMID: 8065535 DOI: 10.1007/BF00967718.