Abstract

Microsomal membrane preparations from rat lung catalyse the incorporation of radioactive linolenic acid from [ 14C]linolenoyl-CoA into position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. The incorporation was stimulated by bovine serum albumin and free CoA. Free fatty acids in the incubation mixtures were not utilised in the incorporation into complex lipids. Fatty acids were transferred to the acyl-CoA pool during the incorporation of linolenic acid into phosphatidylcholine. An increase in lysophosphatidylcholine occurred in incubations containing both bovine serum albumin and free CoA and in the absence of acyl-CoA. The results were consistent with an acyl-CoA: lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase operating in both a forwards and backwards direction and thus catalysing the acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. In incubations with mixed species of acyl-CoAs, palmitic acid was the major fatty acid substrate transferred to phosphatidylcholine in acyl exchange, whereas this acid was completely selected against in the acylation of added lysophosphatidylcholine. The selectivity for palmitoyl-CoA was particularly enhanced when the mixed acyl-CoA substrate was presented to the microsomes in molar concentrations equivalent to the molar ratios of the fatty acids in position 2 of sn-phosphatidylcholine. During acyl exchange, the predominant fatty acid transferred to phosphatidylcholine from acyl-CoA was palmitic acid, whereas arachidonic acid was particularly selected for in the reverse reaction from phosphatidylcholine to acyl-CoA. A hypothesis is presented to explain the differential selectivity for acyl species between the forward and backward reactions of the acyltransferase that is based upon different affinities of the enzyme for substrates at high and low concentrations of acyl donor. Acyl exchange between acyl-CoA and phosphatidylcholine offers, therefore, a possible mechanism for the acyl-remodelling of phosphatidylcholine for the production of lung surfactant.

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