Summary: | Paramecium requires oleate for growth. The phospholipids of the ciliate contain high concentrations of palmitate and 18- and 20-carbon unsaturated fatty acids. We previously showed that radiolabeled oleate is desaturated and elongated to provide these 18- and 20-carbon unsaturated acids. We now report on saturated fatty acid (SFA) metabolism in Paramecium. Radiolabeled palmitate and stearate were incorporated directly into cellular phospholipids with little or no desaturation and/or elongation. Radiolabeled acetate, malonate, pyruvate, citrate, or glucose added to cultures were not incorporated into cellular phospholipid fatty acids indicating that these exogenously supplied putative precursors were not utilized for fatty acid synthesis by Paramecium. Radiolabel from octanoate or hexanoate appeared in fatty acyl groups of phospholipids, possibly by partial beta-oxidation and reincorporation of the label. Under oleate-free conditions in which cultures do not grow, radiolabel from these shorter chain SFA were beta-oxidized and preferentially used for the formation of arachidonate, the major end-product of fatty acid synthesis in Paramecium. Cerulenin inhibited culture growth apparently by inhibiting de novo fatty acid synthesis. Cerulenin-treated cells did not incorporate radioactivity from [1-14C]octanoate into esterified palmitate. However, total saponifiable phospholipid fatty acids, including SFA, per cell increased under these conditions.
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