Abstract

Small amounts of phospholipid metabolites, phosphoethanolamine and phosphoserine, were discovered at a ratio of 1:9 in the brain of a freshwater mollusk, the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis L., collected both in summer and autumn. The phosphoethanolamine pool increased by 15% in autumn relative to the summer level (up to 625 ± 44 nmol per g of wet tissue), although this value still constituted 6% of the total pool of free amino acids and ninhydrin-positive substances. These findings are in striking contrast with our previous results that showed adaptive modifications of the amino acid and phosphoethanolamine pools in the brain of eurythermal freshwater fish at low temperatures. At the same time, these data demonstrate the presence of phosphoethanolamine and phosphoserine in the central nervous system at comparatively early stages of its evolution.

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