1. The use of ;marker' enzymes for investigating the contamination by endoplasmic reticulum of mitochondrial and synaptosomal (nerve-ending) fractions isolated from guinea-pig brain was examined. NADPH-cytochrome c reductase appeared to be satisfactory. With the synaptosomal preparation there was a non-occluded enzymic activity believed to arise from contaminating microsomes and an occluded form released by detergent, which probably was derived from some type of intraterminal smooth endoplasmic reticulum. 2. Isolated brain mitochondria, both intact and osmotically shocked, could not synthesize more labelled phosphatidylcholine from CDP-[Me-(14)C]choline or phosphoryl[Me-(14)C]choline than could be accounted for by microsomal contamination. They could synthesize only phosphatidic acid and diphosphatidylglycerol from a [(32)P]P(i) precursor and not nitrogen-containing phosphoglycerides or phosphatidylinositol. 3. The synaptosomal outer membrane and the intraterminal mitochondria could not synthesize phosphatidylcholine from CDP-[Me-(14)C]choline but the synaptic vesicles and probably the intraterminal ;endoplasmic reticulum' appeared to be capable of catalysing the incorporation of label from this substrate into their phospholipids. 4. Microsomal fractions and synaptosomes from guinea-pig brain could incorporate [Me-(14)C]choline into their phospholipids by a non-energy-requiring exchange process, which was catalysed by Ca(2+). Fractionation of the synaptosomes after such an exchange had taken place revealed that the label was predominantly in the intraterminal mitochondria and not associated with membranes containing NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. 5. On the intraperitoneal injection of [(32)P]P(i) into guinea pigs, incorporation of radioactivity into phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidic acid was much faster than into the nitrogen-containing phosphoglycerides. Mitochondria and microsomal fractions showed a roughly equivalent incorporation into individual phospholipids, and that into synaptosomes was appreciably less, whereas the phospholipids of myelin showed little (32)P incorporation up to 10h.
Fatty acids are precursors of potent lipid signaling molecules. They are stored in membrane phospholipids and released by phospholipase A2 (PLA2). Lysophospholipid acyltransferases (ATs) oppose PLA2 by re-esterifying fatty acids into phospholipids, in a biochemical pathway known as the Lands Cycle. Drosophila Lands Cycle ATs oys and nes, as well as 7 predicted PLA2 genes, are expressed in the male reproductive tract. Oys and Nes are required for spermatid individualization. Individualization, which occurs after terminal differentiation, invests each spermatid in its own plasma membrane and removes the bulk of the cytoplasmic contents. We developed a quantitative assay to measure individualization defects. We demonstrate that individualization is sensitive to temperature and age but not to diet. Mutation of the cyclooxygenase Pxt, which metabolizes fatty acids to prostaglandins, also leads to individualization defects. In contrast, modulating phospholipid levels by mutation of the phosphatidylcholine lipase Swiss cheese (Sws) or the ethanolamine kinase Easily shocked (Eas) does not perturb individualization, nor does Sws overexpression. Our results suggest that fatty acid derived signals such as prostaglandins, whose abundance is regulated by the Lands Cycle, are important regulators of spermatogenesis.
SummaryEpidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligands undergo a complex series of processing events during their maturation to active signaling proteins. Like its mammalian homologs, the predominant Drosophila EGFR ligand Spitz is produced as a transmembrane pro-protein. In the secretory pathway, Spitz is cleaved within its transmembrane domain to release the extracellular signaling domain. This domain is modified with an N-terminal palmitate group that tethers it to the plasma membrane. We found that the pro-protein can reach the cell surface in the absence of proteolysis, but that it fails to activate the EGFR. To address why the transmembrane pro-protein is inactive, whereas membrane association through the palmitate group promotes activity, we generated a panel of chimeric constructs containing the Spitz extracellular region fused to exogenous transmembrane proteins. Although the orientation of the EGF domain and its distance from the plasma membrane varies in these chimeras, they are all active in vivo. Thus, tethering Spitz to the membrane via a transmembrane domain at either terminus does not prevent activity. Conversely, removing the N-terminal palmitate group from the C-terminally tethered pro-protein does not render it active. Furthermore, we show that the Spitz transmembrane pro-protein can activate the EGFR in a tissue culture assay, indicating that its failure to signal in vivo is not due to structural features. In polarized imaginal disc cells, unprocessed Spitz pro-protein localizes to apical puncta, whereas the active chimeric Spitz constructs are basolaterally localized. Taken together, our data support the model that localized trafficking of the pro-protein restricts its ability to activate the receptor in polarized tissues.
1. When unlabelled mitochondria from guinea-pig brain were incubated with a (32)P-labelled microsomal fraction from brain there was a transfer of phospholipid to the mitochondria, which could not be accounted for by an aggregation of microsomes and mitochondria or an exchange with microsomes contaminating the mitochondria. Under similar circumstances there was a transfer of phospholipid from (32)P-labelled mitochondria to microsomes, indicating that the process was one of exchange. 2. The transfer from microsomes was greatly stimulated by a non-dialysable heat-labile macromolecular component in the brain supernatant fraction but not by the concentration of the particulate fractions. 3. Phospholipid-exchange processes occurred most readily between pH7 and 7.5 and were inhibited by the presence of myelin and on the addition of lysophosphatidylcholine. 4. The rates of transfer of individual phospholipids from brain microsomes to mitochondria were similar. 5. (32)P-labelled microsomes could slowly donate phospholipid to the isolated synaptosomal (nerve-ending) fraction but the phospholipids of the myelin fraction did not exchange. 6. Subfractionation of the synaptosomal fraction after [(32)P]phospholipid transfer showed that the mitochondria were most actively labelled during the incubation. All of the isolated individual synaptosomal membranes were capable of acquiring phospholipid on incubation with a (32)P-labelled brain supernatant fraction although a greater percentage was again exchanged by the mitochondrial fraction.
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