4.5 Article

Triacylglycerol catabolism in the prawn Macrobrachium borellii (Crustacea: Palaemoniade)

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2011.08.006

Keywords

Lipase; Triacylglycerol; Lipid metabolism; Fatty acid; Crustacean

Funding

  1. CONICET [PIP 5888]
  2. ANPCyT [PICT 25794]
  3. CICBA (Argentina)

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While invertebrates store neutral lipids as their major energy source, little is known about triacylglycerol (TAG) class composition and their differential catabolism in aquatic arthropods. This study focuses on the composition of the main energy source and its catabolism by lipase from the midgut gland (hepatopancreas) of the crustacean Macrobrachium borellii. Silver-ion thin-layer chromatography of prawn large TAG deposit (80% of total lipids) and its subsequent fatty acid analysis by gas chromatography allowed the identification of 4 major fractions. These are composed of fatty acids of decreasing unsaturation and carbon chain length, the predominant being 18:1n-9. Fraction I, the most unsaturated one, contained mainly 20:5n-3; fraction II 18:2n-6; fraction Ill 18:1n-9 while the most saturated fraction contained mostly 16:0. Hepatopancreas main lipase (Mr 72 kDa) cross-reacted with polyclonal antibodies against insect lipase, was not dependent on the presence of Ca2+ and had an optimum activity at 40 degrees C and pH 8.0. Kinetic analysis showed a Michaelis-Menten behavior. A substrate competition assay evidenced lipase specificity following the order: 18:1n-9-TAG>PUFA-enriched-TAG> 16:0-TAG different from that in vertebrates. These data indicate there is a reasonable correspondence between the fatty acid composition of TAG and the substrate specificity of lipase, which may be an important factor in determining which fatty adds are mobilized during lipolysis for oxidation in crustaceans. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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