Premium
Lipids of cultured hepatoma cells: IV. Effect of serum and lipid upon cellular and media neutral lipids
Author(s) -
Wood Randall,
Falch John
Publication year - 1974
Publication title -
lipids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1558-9307
pISSN - 0024-4201
DOI - 10.1007/bf02533822
Subject(s) - triglyceride , linoleic acid , fetal bovine serum , cholesterol , palmitic acid , biochemistry , fatty acid , glyceride , chemistry , clinical chemistry , lipid metabolism , lipidology , cell
Minimal deviation hepatoma 7288C cells were cultured in a modified Swim's medium supplemented with decreasing levels of serum, lipid‐free serum, lipid‐free serum plus fatty acids, and other additives. Cellular and media neutral lipid classes were quantitated, the fatty acids of triglycerides and sterol esters analyzed, and the carbon number distribution of triglycerides determined. Cellular triglyceride biosynthesis virtually was inhibited when the medium was supplemented with bovine serum alone. This inhibition was not observed when the medium was supplemented with fetal calf serum alone or mixtures of fetal calf serum and bovine serum. Cells cultivated on medium supplemented with lipid‐free serum plus palmitic or linoleic acids had much lower levels of free and esterified cholesterol. The fatty acid composition of cellular triglycerides and cholesterol esters differed dramatically from the corresponding media lipid classes. Except when linoleic acid was added to the medium, changes in the media serum and lipid levels had only marginal effects upon the fatty acid composition of cellular triglycerides and cholesterol esters. These data, in conjunction with earlier data that showed the media neutral lipid levels did not decrease during cell growth, indicate that these hepatoma cells utilize little or no serum triglycerides and cholesterol esters. Linoleic acid added to the medium dramatically reduced the level of 18∶1 acids in cellular triglycerides and cholesterol esters. Palmitic acid added to the medium did not change the fatty acid compositions significantly. Comparison of experimentally determined and calculated triglyceride carbon number percentages indicated a random distribution of fatty acids in this glyceride. The fatty acid composition of cellular triglycerides was similar to the composition of the cholesterol esters. The lack of characteristic and distinguishable compositions of these two classes that occur in most normal tissues suggests a loss of specificity in the lipid metabolism of this neoplasm at the class level.