Abstract

Isolated rat brain capillaries were incubated in the presence of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) containing [stearic acid-14C, (methyl-3H)choline]sphingomyelin. This double-labeled sphingomyelin was taken up in a concentration-dependent manner. Cerebral capillary-associated sphingomyelin had a 3H/14C ratio close to that of the incubation medium, a result indicating uptake of sphingomyelin without prior hydrolysis. TLC of lipid extracted from capillaries showed that part of the sphingomyelin (up to 40%) was hydrolyzed in the brain capillaries to ceramide and free fatty acids. The hydrolysis was proportional to the amount of incorporated sphingomyelin and reached a plateau when the HDL sphingomyelin concentration in the medium was 237 nmol/ml. The results of "pulse-chase" experiments showed that the choline moiety of sphingomyelin was recovered in the incubation medium after the chase period and that there was no redistribution of liberated choline in phosphatidyl-choline of capillaries.

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