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Metabolic heterogeneity of phosphoglyceride classes and subfractions during cell cleavage and early embryogenesis: Model for cell membrane biogenesis

✍ Scribed by Carlos A. Barassi; Nicolás G. Bazán


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1974
Tongue
English
Weight
928 KB
Volume
84
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

During the early developmental stages of the toad, Bufo arenarum, Hensel. up to the stage of gill circulation (150 hr of development at 20–25°C) the total phospholipids content as well as that of phosphoglycerides of choline and of ethanolamine were found unchanged. The subfraction of both phosphoglycerides were separated according to the number of double bonds on silver‐ion chromatography and were also found to be unchanged up to the tail bud stage. The distribution of non‐polar side chains in the subfractions varied in both phosphoglycerides showing a structural heterogeneity. In the phosphatidylethanolamines predominate the polyenoic containing subfractions.

In contrast with the constant concentration of polar lipids, during early embryogenesis a steady increase in ^32^P incorporation into phospholipids takes place when oocytes labeled during oogenesis are used. These changes were also correlated with the DNA content up to gill circulation stage.

It is proposed that most of the nascent membrane polar lipids during early embryogenesis may be derived from a storage site through an active and specific intracellular redistribution process. At the arrival of the polar lipid to the nascent membrane a change in their covalent structure by introduction of a phosphorylbase from a highly labeled pool may explain the raise in specific activity. This change may be necessary to make possible the assembly of the lipid into the membrane structure.