Abstract

We investigated the effect of exogenous fatty acids on phosphatidylcholine (PC) and disaturated phosphati-dylcholine (DSPC) synthesis by rat granular pneumocytes in primary culture. Synthesis of PC and DSPC from [ 3- methyl]choline, as evaluated by increasing specific activity (pmol choline incorporated /μ g phosphorus), was linear for 3 h. Exogenous palmitic, oleic, linoleic, or linolenic acid (100 μM each) increased the synthesis of PC by approx. 50% during incubation for 3 h. In contrast, synthesis of DSPC was increased only by palmitic acid. The increase in DSPC synthesis was approx. 150% after 3 h. Conversion of choline phosphate to PC was increased in the presence of palmitic or oleic acid as indicated by pulse-chase studies with [ 3H- methylcholine in the intact cells. Cells incubated for 3 h with either oleic or palmitic acid showed increased choline-phosphate cytidyltransferase activity in the cells and the microsomal fraction. In addition, oleic acid increased the activity of this enzyme in the cytosolic fraction. The distribution of this enzyme in cytosolic and microsomal fraction was 24 and 76% in the cells incubated with palmitic acid and 32 and 68% in control cells. These results suggest that exogenous fatty acids stimulate the de novo pathway of PC synthesis in granular pneumocytes by increasing the microsomal choline-phosphate cytidyltransferase activity.

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