Abstract

Type II pneumonocytes isolated from adult rat lung were incubated in a serum-free medium containing [14C]glycerol and the incorporation of 14C into glycerophospholipids was measured. After 24 h, more than 80% of the 14C incorporated into total lipids or into phosphatidylcholine and approx. 90% of the 14C incorporated into phosphatidylglycerol after 24 h was recovered in the glycerophosphoester moieties of these molecules. Supplementation of the incubation medium with foetal-bovine serum (10%, v/v) did not alter the incorporation of [14C]glycerol by type II pneumonocytes after 24 h into either a total lipid extract or phosphatidylcholine. In the presence of foetal-bovine serum, however, the incorporation of 14C into phosphatidylglycerol was decreased and the incorporation of 14C into phosphatidylinositol was increased. In the absence of foetal-bovine serum, the incorporation of 14C into phosphatidylglycerol was decreased progressively as the concentration of myo-inositol in the incubation medium was increased. The range of concentration (0.04-0.50 mM) over which myo-inositol had the greatest influence on [14C]glycerol incorporation into phosphatidylglycerol by type II pneumonocytes in vitro encompassed the concentration range measured in foetal-rat serum late in gestation. At 4 days before birth, the concentration of myo-inositol in foetal-rat serum was 0.36 mM and decreased to 0.23 mM 1 day before birth. The concentration of myo-inositol in adult rat serum increased from 0.03 mM to 0.06 mM during pregnancy. Isolated rat type II pneumonocytes were found to take up myo-inositol by a saturable process. A half-maximal rate of myo-inositol uptake occurred at a concentration of myo-inositol of 0.29 mM. The results of this investigation are consistent with the hypothesis that late in gestation there is a decreasing availability of myo-inositol to the foetal lungs and that this favours the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerol for surfactant at the expense of phosphatidylinositol biosynthesis.

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