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. 1986 Jun 1;236(2):475-80.
doi: 10.1042/bj2360475.

The catabolism of plasmenylcholine in the guinea pig heart

The catabolism of plasmenylcholine in the guinea pig heart

G Arthur et al. Biochem J. .

Abstract

The hydrolysis of the alkenyl bonds of plasmenylcholine and plasmenylethanolamine by plasmalogenase, followed by hydrolysis of the resultant lysophospholipid by lysophospholipase, has been postulated as the major pathway for the catabolism of these plasmalogens. However, the postulation was based solely on the presence of plasmalogenase activity towards plasmenylethanolamine and plasmenylcholine in the brain. In this study we have demonstrated the absence of plasmalogenase activity for plasmenylcholine in the guinea pig heart under a wide range of experimental conditions. Plasmenylcholine was hydrolysed by phospolipase A2 activities in cardiac microsomal, mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions. Phospholipase A2 activities in these fractions had an alkaline pH optimum and were enhanced by Ca2+. The enzymes also displayed high specificity for plasmenylcholine with linoleoyl or oleoyl at the C-2 position. Lysoplasmalogenase activity for lysoplasmenycholine was also detected and characterized in the microsomal and mitochondrial fractions. Since the cardiac plasmalogenase is only active towards plasmenylethanolamine but not plasmenylcholine, the catabolism of these two plasmalogens must be different from each other. We postulate that the major pathway for the catabolism of plasmenycholine involves the hydrolysis of the C-2 fatty acid by phospholipase A2, and hydrolysis of the vinyl ether group of the resultant lysoplasmenylcholine by lysoplasmalogenase.

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