Danish
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects 1992-Dec

Comparison of the molecular species patterns of phosphatidic acid, CDP-diacylglycerols and phosphatidylinositol in potato tuber, pea leaf and soya-bean microsomes: consequences for the selectivity of the enzymes catalyzing phosphatidylinositol biosynthesis.

Kun registrerede brugere kan oversætte artikler
Log ind / Tilmeld
Linket gemmes på udklipsholderen
A M Justin
P Mazliak

Nøgleord

Abstrakt

Microsomes prepared from pea leaf, potato tuber or germinated soya-beans, were incubated for 30 min with [14C]glycerol 3-phosphate. In the three tissues, phosphatidic acid (PA), CDP-diacylglycerols (CMP-PA) and phosphatidylinositol (PI) were labelled and could be separated by TLC. After methylation of phosphatidic acid, or treatment of CMP-PA by a nucleotidase, the molecular species composition of the three lipid classes could be determined by radio-HPLC. The similarity observed between the distributions of radioactivity among CMP-PA and PA molecular species, in the three tissues, indicates that the enzyme CTP:PA cytidylyltransferase did not present any selectivity towards any molecular species of PA. In contrast, only two molecular species containing palmitic acid (16:0/18:2 and 16:0/18:3) were labelled in PI whereas labelled PA and CMP-PA contained molecular species possessing stearic acid (18:0/18:2, 18:0/18:3 and 18:0/18:1). This indicates that the enzyme PI-synthase utilizes preferentially those molecular species of CMP-PA containing palmitic acid as substrates. However, mass analyses of PI prepared from the microsomes of the three tissues used in this study, indicated the presence of molecular species containing stearic acid (18:0/18:2 and 18:2/18:2). Except in soya-bean microsomes (where 18:0/18:2-PI represented 16% of total PI), those last molecular species were always present in small amounts.

Deltag i vores
facebook-side

Den mest komplette database med medicinske urter understøttet af videnskab

  • Arbejder på 55 sprog
  • Urtekurer, der understøttes af videnskab
  • Urtegenkendelse ved billede
  • Interaktivt GPS-kort - tag urter på stedet (kommer snart)
  • Læs videnskabelige publikationer relateret til din søgning
  • Søg medicinske urter efter deres virkninger
  • Organiser dine interesser og hold dig opdateret med nyhedsundersøgelser, kliniske forsøg og patenter

Skriv et symptom eller en sygdom, og læs om urter, der kan hjælpe, skriv en urt og se sygdomme og symptomer, den bruges mod.
* Al information er baseret på offentliggjort videnskabelig forskning

Google Play badgeApp Store badge