Abstract

The activities of the enzymatic systems involved in the activation and degradation of fatty acids, and in the synthesis of triacylglycerols and phospholipids were studied in vitro using total cellular homogenate and subcellular fractions of eggs of the shrimp Macrobrachium borellii at different developing stages. Egg development was divided into seven stages based on morphological features of the embryo. Palmitoyl-CoA ligase activity increased as the embryo developed and showed its maximum at stage V. An increase in the synthesis of triacylglycerols and diacylglycerols was also observed at this stage. Diacylglycerylethers were synthesized more actively during the first stages of development. The higher specific activity observed in total homogenate than in microsomal fraction suggested that their synthesis was not exclusively microsomal. Phospholipid synthesis was very active all along development, reflecting active membrane biosynthesis. The highest activity of the cytosolic triacylglycerol lipase was observed at stage V. Fatty acid degradation, measured as mitochondrial beta-oxidation activity, did not vary significantly during development. We conclude that both the anabolic and catabolic processes concerning lipid metabolism are very active, with values similar to those described for adult hepatopancreas, revealing the major role of lipids during shrimp embryogenesis energetics, and that the highest activities of lipid synthesis-hydrolysis take place at stage V when embryos are under active organogenesis. J. Exp. Zool. 286:231-237, 2000.

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