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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI110959

High affinity esterification of eicosanoid precursor fatty acids by platelets.

E J Neufeld, D B Wilson, H Sprecher, and P W Majerus

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Published July 1, 1983 - More info

Published in Volume 72, Issue 1 on July 1, 1983
J Clin Invest. 1983;72(1):214–220. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI110959.
© 1983 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published July 1, 1983 - Version history
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Abstract

We have examined the relative rates of uptake of several fatty acids into washed, human platelets by measuring incorporation into cellular phospholipids. In the presence of 15 microM fatty acid-free albumin and with radioactive fatty acid concentrations of 5-500 nM, esterification into phospholipid was linear with time and platelet concentration and saturable with respect to fatty acid concentration. Two distinct classes of uptake rate were observed. Arachidonate and 5,8,11,14,17-eicosapentaenoate exhibited high affinity, relatively rapid incorporation into platelet phospholipids at pH 6.5: apparent Michaelis constant (Km) = 30 nM, apparent maximum velocity (Vmax) = 28 pmol/min per 10(9) platelets. Two other eicosanoid precursors, 5,8,11-eicosatrienoate and 8,11,14-eicosatrienoate, exhibited the same Vmax, but Km of 85 and 60 nM, respectively. Under the same conditions, stearate, oleate, and linoleate were incorporated into phospholipids much less efficiently (Vmax approximately 8 pmol/10(9) cells per min, apparent Km greater than or equal to 170 nM). Qualitatively similar results were found at pH 7.4. Uptake of radiolabeled, rapid-uptake fatty acids was not diminished by the presence of excess, unlabeled, slow-uptake fatty acids. Thus, the specificity of this esterification system resembles that of the arachidonate-specific, long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase present in platelets. It may represent the expression in vivo of the synthetase, although the apparent affinity of the synthetase for fatty acid is much less. This esterification system probably represents the physiologic mechanism for platelet arachidonate uptake, whereby arachidonate is collected from plasma, despite the fact that its concentration is considerably lower than that of other plasma fatty acids.

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