Abstract

The positional distribution of fatty acyl chains in major glycerophospholipids (phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine and 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid) of three membrane fractions (plasma membranes, mitochondria and microsomes) of the thermotolerant Tetrahymena pyriformis NT-1 cells was analyzed at various time intervals within 10 h after a temperature shift from 39 to 15° C. During this period of acclimation there were no changes in both the total phospholipid content and its proportional composition. At the 1-position, the content of palmitate in phosphatidylethanolamine (present solely in diacyl type), diacylphosphatidylcholine, and diacyl-(2-aminoethyl)phosphonolipid was decreased progressively after temperature-shift, while γ-linolenate increased in a complementary fashion, in mitochondria and microsomes. The increase in the percentage of linoleate was compensated by the decrease in oleate at the 2-position of two 1,2-diacylphospholipids. On the other hand, as for 1-alkyl-2-acyl-phospholipids, a marked increment in γ-linolenate occurred, with a decline of oleate and linoleate at the 2-position of 1-alkyl-2-acylphosphatidylcholine, but no significant alterations were seen at the 2-position of 1-alkyl-2-acyl-(2-aminoethyl) phosphonolipid. The results suggest that the newly modified phospholipid molecular species such as 1-γ-linolenoyl-2-linoleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine and 1-hexadecyl-2-γ-linolenoyl-phosphatidylcholine disseminate rapidly to other cell compartments and that they would play a pivotal role in the adaptive amelioration of altered membrane physical states during the cold acclimation.

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