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. 1975 Dec 1;413(2):234-42.
doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(75)90107-8.

Lipid composition of Limulus photoreceptor membranes

Lipid composition of Limulus photoreceptor membranes

R M Benolken et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

The lipid composition has been determined for rhabdomeric photoreceptor membranes of Limulus, and these data are compared with those from photoreceptor membranes of albino rats. The comparison is of interest because the membranes of these two photoreceptor cells regulate ionic transport differently during the response to illumination. 1. Phospholipid class composition of Limulus is similar, but not identical, to that of rats. The major differences are a greater percentage of sphingomyelin in Limulus and a greater percentage of phosphatidylethanolamine in the rat. 2. Ethanolamine plasmalogens, not observed in rat photoreceptor membranes, are present in Limulus photoreceptor fractions. 3. The level of cholesterol in Limulus is higher than that usually reported for vertebrate rod outer segments. 4. The predominant polyunsaturated fatty acids of Limulus photoreceptor membrane phospholipids are 20: 4(n-6) and 20: 5(n-3) with only traces of 22: 6(n-3). This is in sharp contrast with the large percentages of 22: 6(n-3) found in rat photoreceptors. 5. The fatty acid distributions of both membrane systems are highly unsaturated, but the ratio of (n-3) to (n-6) polyunsaturates is only 1.7 for Limulus as compared to 4.6 for rat.

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