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. 1988 Jan;13(1):1-8.
doi: 10.1007/BF00971848.

The incorporation of monomethylethanolamine and dimethylethanolamine in fetal brain aggregating cell culture

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The incorporation of monomethylethanolamine and dimethylethanolamine in fetal brain aggregating cell culture

F Dainous et al. Neurochem Res. 1988 Jan.

Abstract

Fetal rat brain aggregating cell cultures were exposed to varying concentrations of [3H]monomethylethanolamine (MME) and [3H] dimethylethanolamine (DME). The rate of labeling of water-soluble compounds was more rapid and the amount of radioactivity present was greater than in the lipids. After a 72 hour incubation in the presence of millimolar concentrations of these nitrogenous bases, the major water-soluble products were the phosphorylated form of the bases. Little label was associated with the free bases or their cytidyl derivative. In the phospholipids, 97% of the radioactivity was recovered in phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine (PMME) and 3% in phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine (PDME) or 95% in PDME and 5% in phosphatidylcholine (PC) after growth in presence of [3H]MME and [3H]DME respectively. The rate of formation of the radioactive products increased as function of the concentration of the nitrogenous base added up to 4 mM, the highest concentration employed. There was no significant difference in the pattern of labeling with cells grown in media devoid of methionine or choline. The turnover of the water-soluble metabolites was more rapid than in the phospholipids where an apparent half-life of 24 hours was calculated.

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