Abstract
Freshly caught orange roughy (Hoplostethus atlanticus) obtained at the edge of the Chatham Rise, east of the South Island of New Zealand, in June 1988, were used to investigate tissue-specific lipid synthesis and to obtain blood for plasma lipoprotein analysis. Tissue slices prepared from an intraneurocranial fat deposit, pieces of skull (neurocranium), swimbladder and liver were incubated with radioactive acetate, palmitate and oleate, and the labelled lipids extracted and analysed. All four tissues could incorporate acetate label into fatty acids which were themselves incorporated into triacylglycerols and phospholipids although not into wax esters, the most abundant lipid class in these tissues. Exogenous palmitate and oleate were also incorporated into more complex lipids, with the label from oleate (but not palmitate) being found in wax esters as well as triacylglycerols and phospholipids. The distribution of the label in the wax esters showed that some reduction of the fatty acid to fatty alcohol had occurred. The only exception to this pattern was the swimbladder, which incorporated small amounts of palmitate-label into both the fatty acid and fatty alcohol portions of the wax esters. Lipoproteins were isolated from serum by centrifugation. All lipoprotein classes contained phospholipid, cholesterol, triacylglycerol, cholesteryl esters and wax esters. A very low-density lipoprotein class also contained large amounts of unesterified fatty acids, which are possibly artefacts resulting from storage of the samples. Significant quantities ofω-3 fatty acids were also found in the serum lipids.
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