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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 250

Ronai, A. and Wunderlich, F.; Membranes of Tetrahymena. IV. Isolation and characterization of temperature-responsive smooth and rough microsomal subfractions. J.Membr.Biol. 24:381-399, 1975

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Temperature-responsive microsomes of the ciliate protozoan Tetrahymena have been originally fractionated by step centrifugation on two-layered, Mg2+ -containing sucrose gradients. Three fractions have been obtained, which are termed smooth I, smooth II and rough according to the appearance of the membrane vesicles upon electron-microscopy. Smooth I, smooth II, and rough microsomes exhibit RNA/protein ratios of 0.09, 0.20, and 0.34; their phospholipid/protein ratios and their neutral lipid/phospholipid ratios were 0.52, 0.43 and 0.25, and 0.17, 0.18 and 0.13, respectively. All three fractions contain equivalent, low succinic dehydrogenase and 5'-nucleotidase activities. Glucose-6-phosphatase and acid phosphatase are more concentrated in smooth I membranes than in rough membranes. The reverse is true for ATPase. The smooth II membranes occupy an intermediate position except that their ATPase activity is the lowest of the three fractions. The specific activities of these enzymes of the three microsomal fractions are compared to those of homogenates of whole cells. Thin-layer chromatography reveals a very similar polar and nonpolar lipid pattern of the three microsomal fractions. The major phospholipid compounds are phosphatidlethanolamine, glycerideaminoethylphosphonate and phosphatidylcholine, while diglycerides, an unknown NL-compound, and triglycerides are the major apolar lipids. Gas liquid chromatography shows that the fatty acids are mainly even-numbered ranging between C12 and C18. The smooth I, smooth II and rough membranes contain 65.2, 69.3 and 72.7% unsaturated fatty acids in their polar lipids, whereas only 52.7, 49.7 and 48.3% unsaturated acids are found in their apolar lipids, respectively. The fatty acids are more unevenly distributed among the individual polar lipids than in the apolar ones.