Abstract
Respiring slices of adult rat cerebrum have been shown to incorporate long-chain l4C-iabelled fatty acids into phospholipid. Labelling was almost entirely confined to lecithin and ethanolamine phospholipid, only traces being present in serine phospholipid. Palmitic acid, oleic acid and linoleic acid were incorporated more actively into lecithin than into ethanolamine phospholipid, but the converse was found with stearic acid. All four acids labelled the 1- and 2-positions of both lipids; palmitic acid, oleic acid and linoleic acid were approximately evenly distributed, but stearic acid was incorporated predominantly at the 1-position. It is considered that incorporation is most likely brought about through acylation of endogenously derived lysophosphatides. The possible implications of this pathway of lipid metabolism in nervous tissue are discussed.