Abstract
The metabolism of a polyunsaturated and a saturated fatty acid in brain membrane phosphoglycerides was examined by injecting simultaneously a mixture of14C-arachidonate and3H-stearate into the mouse brain and isolating the microsomal and synaptosomal fractions at 1–40 min after injections. Both types of labeled fatty acids were utilized more readily in the microsomal than the synaptosomal fractions in brain. However, labeled arachidonate was incorporated more rapidly into membrane phosphoglycerides than was stearate. In both subcellular fractions, the relative specific radioactivity (3H and14C) of diacyl-glycerophosphorylinositol (diacyl-GPI) was higher than other types of phosphoglycerides such as diacyl-glycerophosphorylcholine (diacyl-GPC) and diacyl-glycerophosphorylethanolamine (diacyl-GPE). Furthermore, the apparent rates of incorporation of radioactivity into diacyl-GPI was more rapid for the14C-arachidonate than for the3H-stearate. Results of the experiment have demonstrated obvious differences in metabolism between stearate and arachidonate in brain. The more rapid transfer of arachidonate to diacyl-GPI is probably due to the presence of an acyl transferase system specially active for the transfer of arachidonyl groups to diacyl-GPI.