| Literature DB >> 7096347 |
Abstract
Two independent experiments indicated that the major subcellular site of de novo dolichyl phosphate biosynthesis in rat liver is in the microsomes. First, when purified subcellular fractions were assayed for long chain prenyltransferase activity, the profile obtained indicated exclusively a microsomal localization. Second, when liver slices were incubated 60 min with [14C]acetate and subcellular fractions were subsequently isolated, the microsomal fraction was found to contain greater than two-thirds of the total radioactivity incorporated into dolichyl phosphate. Chemical analysis of dolichyl phosphate in subcellular fractions showed substantial quantities in both the microsomal and mitochondrial-lysosomal fractions. In contrast, dolichol was found primarily in the mitochondrial-lysosomal fraction. The absolute in vitro rate of hepatic dolichyl phosphate synthesis was determined in liver slices and isolated hepatocytes by [14C]acetate labeling using [3H] water incorporation into cholesterol to correct for the dilution of the labeled acetate by the endogenous acetyl-CoA pool. From this value, an in vivo rate of de novo synthesis was estimated as 1.7-2.6 nmol of dolichyl phosphate/liver/day. This rate is more than 30 times the maximum possible rate of accumulation in liver of dietary dolichol (Keller, R. K., Jehle, E., and Adair, W. L., Jr. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 8985-8989). From the previously determined concentration of dolichyl phosphate in rate liver (Keller, R. K. Tamkun, J. M., and Adair, W. L. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 5831-5836) and the de novo rate of synthesis, it appears that the half-life of hepatic dolichyl phosphate is on the order of days.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 7096347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157