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Plant Physiology 91:587-597 (1989)
© 1989 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Synthesis of Ethanolamine and Its Regulation in Lemna paucicostata1

S. Harvey Mudd and Anne H. Datko

Laboratory of General and Comparative Biochemistry, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892

The metabolism of ethanolamine and its derivatives in Lemna paucicostata has been investigated, with emphasis on the path-way for synthesis of phosphoethanolamine, a precursor of phosphatidylcholine in higher plants. In experiments involving labeling of intact plants with radioactive serine, ambiguities of interpretation due to entry of radioactivity into methyl groups of methylated ethanolamine derivatives were mitigated by pregrowth of plants with methionine. Difficulties due to labeling of diacylglyceryl moieties of phospholipids were avoided by acid hydrolysis of crucial samples and determination of radioactivity in isolated serine or ethanolamine moieties. The results obtained from such experiments are most readily reconciled with the biosynthetic sequence: serine -> ethanolamine -> phosphoethanolamine -> phosphatidylethanolamine. A possible alternative is: serine -> phosphatidylserine -> phosphatidylethanolamine -> ethanolamine -> phosphoethanolamine. Cell-free extracts of L. paucicostata were shown to produce CO2 from the carbon originating as C-1 of serine at a rate sufficient to satisfy the demand for ethanolamine moieties. A number of experiments produced no support for a hypothetical role for phosphoserine in phosphoethanolamine formation. Uptake of exogenous ethanolamine commensurately down-regulates the synthesis of ethanolamine moieties (considered as a whole, and regardless of their state of derivatization at the time of their formation). In agreement with previous observations, uptake of exogenous choline down-regulates the methylation of phosphoethanolamine, without being accompanied by secondary accumulation of a marked excess of ethanolamine derivatives.


1 Reprint requests should be addressed to the authors at Building 36, Room 3D06, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.




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