Abstract
The lipids from the electric organ of the ray, Torpedo marmorata, have been isolated and characterized. The major lipids were cholesterol, choline phospholipids, ethanolamine phospholipids, and sphingomyelins. The major fatty acids of ethanolamine phospholipids were 18:1, 18:0, 22:6, and 20:4. More than 50% of the acids in choline phospholipids were 16:0. The sphingomyelins consisted of five major ceramide species, all with sphingosine and the fatty acids 14:0, 15:0, 16:0, 22:1, and 24:1. The fatty acid 15:0 was mostly branched (n-2), a fatty acid earlier identified in sphingomyelins of the rectal gland of spiny dogfish. All long-chain bases were dihydroxy bases with a small percentage of branched chains. Sulfatides (cerebroside sulfate) made up the largest glycolipid fraction. The polar moiety wase galactose-3-sulfate. The fatty acids were normal and 2-hydroxy; the homologue 24:1 was the most abundant in both types of fatty acids. Most fatty acids were higher homologues of mono-unsaturated acids, but normal 18:0 fatty acid was also found. The long-chain bases were both dihydroxy and trihydroxy, with very small amounts of branched chains. The two major ceramide species of sulfatides were sphingosine combined with normal and hydroxy 24:1 fatty acids, respectively. Smaller amounts of trihydroxy base (18:0) were found linked to hydroxy 24:1 fatty acid, but not to its normal homologue. The cerebrosides contained the two major species mentioned above but lacked the trihydroxy base-hydroxy fatty acid species. The ratio of the activity of Na+-K+-dependent ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) and the concentration of sulfatides was similar to ratios found for other tissues with normal and increased Na+ and K+ transporting capacity. The significance of this finding is discussed.
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