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Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of long-chain free fatty acids by human platelets

01 Aug 1970-Journal of Clinical Investigation (American Society for Clinical Investigation)-Vol. 49, Iss: 8, pp 1489-1496
TL;DR: There was a rapid net uptake of free fatty acid by human platelets when long-chain FFA, bound to human serum albumin, were incubated with platelet suspensions, and results from experiments in which both palmitate and albumin were labeled indicated that the fatty acid dissociated from the protein during uptake.
Abstract: There was a rapid net uptake of free fatty acid (FFA) by human platelets when long-chain FFA, bound to human serum albumin, were incubated with platelet suspensions. Results from experiments in which both palmitate and albumin were labeled indicated that the fatty acid dissociated from the protein during uptake. Much of the FFA taken up by the platelet in short-term incubations remained in unesterified form, i.e., it was recovered as platelet FFA. As the incubation continued, increasing amounts of FFA were oxidized to CO(2) and incorporated into platelet lipid esters, particularly lecithin. Essentially all of the fatty acid that was incorporated into the platelet FFA fraction was released rapidly from the cells when they were exposed to a medium containing FFA-free albumin. The magnitude of uptake into the platelet FFA fraction was similiar at 0 degrees and 37 degrees C. Likewise, the rate and magnitude of FFA release from the platelet were similar at 0 degrees and 37 degrees C. Therefore, it is likely that both FFA uptake and FFA release occur by energy-independent mechanisms. The major effect of increasing the FFA concentration of the incubation medium was increased fatty acid uptake into the platelet FFA fraction. Similar results occurred when platelets were incubated in human plasma containing increasing amounts of added palmitate. At a given extracellular FFA concentration, considerably more of the saturated fatty acids, palmitate and stearate, were taken up as platelet FFA than either oleate or linoleate.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: When platelets, so labelled, were washed and treated with thrombin, there was a major decrease in the radioactivity of phosphatidylcholine and phosph atidylinositol, accounted for by the appearance of several previously identified 14C-labelled oxygenated products of arachidonic acid.

424 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was calculated that the contribution of the peroxisomes to fatty acid oxidation was less than 10% both in cells from control and clofibrate-treated animals and remained unchanged in starvation and diabetes.

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the arachidonate-specific acyl-CoA synthetase may control the level of free arachidonic acid in platelets, limiting prostaglandin synthesis by the unstimulated cell and capturing free archidonate from extracellular sources.

234 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The roles of absorption, transport, and formation of AA in the buildup of tissue AA pools are summarized, with focus on the role of lipoprotein lipase, lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase, hepatic lipase and the scavenger receptor BI and LDL receptors in tissue uptake of AA.

183 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The possibility that the phospholipase A2 of human platelets is an endoenzyme because of its tendency to act on those phospholIPids that are thought to comprise the inner layer of the cell membrane is raised.

162 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An investigation of the biochemical changes following experimental liver injury felt the need of a simple, rapid, and accurate method for determining the protein fractions in small amounts of serum and began with Kingsley’s biuret procedure.

15,717 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fluorescence spectra of human serum albumin samples indicated that impurities are sometimes present which can be removed by charcoal at neutral pH, and acid-charcoal treatment is a much more rapid method of removing lipid impurities than other methods previously described.

1,960 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In general, palmitate and palmitoleate were bound more tightly than oleate, linoleate, stearate, or myristate, and muchMore tightly than laurate.

453 citations