
doi: 10.2307/3280147
pmid: 448607
A chromatographic analysis of lipids of cultured promastigotes of Leishmania donovani, L. braziliensis, L. mexicana, L. tropica, L. enriettii, L. hertigi, L. adleri, and L. tarentolae showed that total lipids were 2--15% of dry wt, and neutral and polar lipids were 14--55% and 45--86% of total lipids. Major lipid classes were as follows: sterol ester, triacylglycerol, sterol, diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylcholine. Predominant fatty acids were 18:2 (n - 6) greater than 18:3 (n - 3) greater than 18:1 (n - 9) greater than 18:0 greater than 22:6 (n - 3) greater than 22:5 (n - 6) greater than 16:0 greater than 14:0 greater than 18:4 (n - 3) greater than 20:3 (n - 3). Some remarkable distributions of fatty acids among the phospholipid fractions were observed, as follows: diphosphatidylglycerol 18--33% 22:6 (n - 3); phosphatidylinositol 31--68% 18:1 (n - 9); phosphatidylcholine 13--41% 18:3 (n - 3). Alk-l-enyldiacyl glycerols, and alk-l-enylacyl and alkylacyl forms of phosphatidylethanolamine and of phosphatidylinositol were found, and their glyceryl ethers and fatty adehydes analyzed. Notable in the phosphatidylethanolamine of some leishmanias was a cyclopropane fatty acid (4--11%), identified as cis-9,10-methylene octadecanoic acid by chromatographic, and by mass and proton resonance spectrometric analyses. The comparative biochemistry of the cyclopropane fatty acid, characteristic of many prokaryotes, and of alpha-linolenic acid, characteristic of photosynthetic plants, are commented upon.
Leishmania, Chromatography, Fatty Acids, Phosphatidic Acids, Lipids, Sterols, Species Specificity, Animals, Phospholipids
Leishmania, Chromatography, Fatty Acids, Phosphatidic Acids, Lipids, Sterols, Species Specificity, Animals, Phospholipids
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