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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4083

Edna S. Kaneshiro, Kaniaulono B. Meyer, and Mary L. Reese; The Neutral Lipids of Paramecium tetraurelia: Changes with Culture Age and the Detection of Steryl Esters in Ciliary Membranes. J.Protozool. 30(2):392-396, 1983

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Neutral lipids, particularly triglycerides, accounted for the major decrease in the total lipid content in Paramecium cells that occurs with culture age. Sterols, triglycerides, and steryl esters were the major classes of neutral lipids in cells and isolated cilia. Free as well as high concentrations of esterified sterols were detected in purified ciliary membrane preparations. Stigmasterol and 7-dehydrostigmasterols were the major components of both free and esterified sterols of cells and cilia; however, when cholesterol was present in the growth medium, it was desaturated to 7-dehydrocholesterol and incorporated into cellular and ciliary lipids. Free fatty acids from cells and triglycerides from cells and cilia were low in polyunsaturated fatty acids and reflected the composition of fatty acids in the culture medium. An exception was the reduced concentration of stearate in triglycerides from whole cells. Greater than 50% of triglyceride fatty acids from cilia were saturated. The fatty acid compositions of cellular triglycerides and ciliary steryl esters did not change with culture age, but those of cellular steryl esters and ciliary triglycerides did change. In comparison with phospholipids, these neutral lipid fatty acid compositional changes were smaller. The sensitivity of the stigmasterol-containing cells to polyene antibiotics indicated that they were killed by nystatin > filipin > amphotericin B. The unexpected finding of high concentrations of steryl esters in ciliary membrane preparations is discussed.