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. 1973 Mar;14(2):145-51.

Effect of CO 2 concentration on phospholipid metabolism in the isolated perfused rat lung

  • PMID: 4698262
Free article

Effect of CO 2 concentration on phospholipid metabolism in the isolated perfused rat lung

W J Longmore et al. J Lipid Res. 1973 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

Studies have been carried out on the incorporation of [U-(14)C]glucose, [2-(14)C]pyruvate, [2-(14)C]acetate, and [1-(14)C]-palmitate into the phospholipids of the isolated perfused rat lung in the presence of either 6 or 45 mm total CO(2) concentration in the perfusion medium. Incorporation of [U-(14)C]glucose into total phospholipid and into the phosphatidylcholine fraction was increased 19-53% over the 2-hr perfusion period in lungs perfused with medium containing 45 as compared with 6 mm CO(2). The incorporation of [2-(14)C]acetate, [2-(14)C]-pyruvate, and [1-(14)C]palmitate was not affected by the change in medium CO(2) concentration. Increased incorporation of [U-(14)C]glucose combined with a shift toward greater incorporation into the fatty acids of the phosphatidylcholine fraction produced a maximum increase of 90% in [U-(14)C]glucose incorporation into the fatty acids of phosphatidylcholine after 2 hr of perfusion in the presence of medium containing 45 mm CO(2) as compared with 6 mm CO(2). The increase in medium CO(2) concentration produced as much as a 150% increase in [U-(14)C]glucose incorporation into palmitate derived from the phosphatidylcholine fraction. The results provide evidence that glucose functions as an important precursor of palmitate in the phosphatidylcholine fraction of lung phospholipids and that the CO(2) concentration of the perfusion medium affects the incorporation of glucose into palmitate.

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