Abstract

Paramecium requires oleic acid for growth and can grow in media containing no other fatty acids. In the present study, we have shown that this ciliate utilized oleate mainly as a carbon and energy source, even though this fatty acid was the only substrate available for synthesis of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Culture growth was inhibited by the addition of the drug triparanol. Triparanol decreased the formation of polyunsaturated fatty acids from oleate by preventing desaturation to form the dienoic acid, linoleate. Triparanol inhibition resulted in an altered phospholipid fatty acyl composition, an increased fragility and an altered behavioral response of the cells to a depolarizing stimulation solution. Therefore, although most of the dietary oleate was not used by the cells for polyunsaturated fatty acid synthesis, the desaturation of oleic acid was critical for normal culture growth, cell integrity and swimming behavior, all of which are expected to be dependent on normal membrane lipid composition.

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