Abstract
SUMMARY: During fetal and neonatal development the specific activity of the enzyme, CDP diglyceride:inositol transferase in rabbit lung tissue increased 8- to 9-fold from day 17 of gestation to adulthood. This developmental increase in enzyme activity was not specific for lung tissue since a similar increase was also observed in liver tissue. The properties of CDP-diglyceride:inositol transferase in microsomes prepared from either fetal or adult rabbit lung tissue appeared to be the same. The increase in CDP-diglyceride:inositol transferase activity in rabbit lung tissue during development appeared to be reflective of synthesis of new enzyme rather than activation of pre-existing enzyme.
SPECULATION: CDP-diglyceride:inositol transferase activity in fetal rabbit lung tissue increases at a stage in development when the phosphatidylinositol content of lung surfactant is decreasing. In the presence of CMP, CDP-diglyceride:inositoI transferase catalyzes the synthesis of CDP-diglyceride from phosphatidylinositol. We speculate that the increased CDP-diglyceride:inositol transferase activity, in conjunction with elevated intracellular CMP levels resulting from accelerated phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis, provides a pool of CDP-diglyceride for phosphatidylglycerol biosynthesis during the latter stages of fetal lung maturation.
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Bleasdale, J., Wallis, P., MacDonald, P. et al. CHANGES IN CDP-DIGLYCERIDE:INOSITOL TRANSFERASE ACTIVITY DURING RABBIT LUNG DEVELOPMENT. Pediatr Res 13, 1182–1183 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197910000-00022
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197910000-00022
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