Abstract

[(3)H]-Arachidonic acid-labelled rat T lymphocytes released radioactivity extracellularly when stimulated by the calcium ionophore A23187 or by monoclonal antibodies to some cell surface structures (CD2, CD5, CD11a, CD18, CD54, T-cell receptor) but not to others (CD49d, CD62L); release was greater with the calcium ionophore. Almost all of the radioactivity released from anti-CD2-stimulated lymphocytes was recovered in the free fatty acid fraction, whereas only about 50 per cent of that released after A23187 stimulation was recovered in this fraction. A23187 stimulation resulted in release of arachidonic acid from a variety of phospholipids (phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylcholine and perhaps phosphatidylethanolamine), while the monoclonal antibody stimulation released arachidonic acid from phosphatidylinositol and perhaps phosphatidylcholine. Unstimulated lymphocytes released a range of fatty acids extracellularly, with palmitic acid accounting for 35-40 per cent and arachidonic acid for 5 per cent of released fatty acid. Stimulation of lymphocytes with either anti-CD2 or A23187 increased total fatty acid release 1.5- to 1.8-fold. In both cases palmitic acid remained the most predominant fatty acid released but the contribution of arachidonic acid increased. The type of lipid fed to the rats significantly influenced the amount and type of fatty acid released. Fish oil feeding significantly reduced extracellular fatty acid release by stimulated lymphocytes.

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