Quantitative brain autoradiography of [9, 10‐3H]palmitic acid incorporation into brain lipids
- 15 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neuroscience Research
- Vol. 26 (2) , 196-208
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jnr.490260209
Abstract
The distribution of radioactivity within brain metabolic compartments was examined following the intravenous injection of [9,10‐3H]palmitate into awake rats. Brain radioactivity reached a maximum value by 15 min after [9,10‐3H]palmitate injection and remained unchanged for at least 4 hr. Regional differences in radioactivity could be determined with high resolution by quantitative autoradiography, at the level of cell layers within the hippocampus and cerebral cortex, and between striosomes of the caudate nucleus. Regional brain radioactivities were converted to normalized regional radioactivities (k) by dividing them by the integrated plasma fatty acid radioactivity (integrated over the time course of the experiment). These values reflected incorporation mainly into brain phospholipids; radioactivity due to nonlipid components was minimal. Indeed, about 85% of brain radioactivity was within lipids between 5 min and 4 hr postinjection, the remainder being equally divided between protein‐associated pellet and aqueous‐soluble metabolites. The major lipids labeled were phospholipids, particularly phosphatidylcholine, which contained about 75% of phospholipid radioactivity. The results show that [9,10‐3H]palmitate can be used to examine incorporation of plasma palmitate into individual brain regions via quantitative autoradiography. Furthermore, the tracer is a rather selective marker for phosphatidylcholine and can be used to examine turnover and synthesis of this phospholipid. [9,10‐3H]palmitate has advantages over [U‐14C]palmitate for autoradiographic studies of incorporation; following the 14C‐tracer, significant label even at 4 hr after injection is in nonlipid compartments (glutamate and aspartate), and the long path length of 14C limits resolution at the cell layer level.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intravenous injection of [1‐14C]arachidonate to examine regional brain lipid metabolism in unanesthetized ratsJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1989
- Regional cerebral incorporation of plasma [14C]palmitate, and cerebral glucose utilization, in water-deprived Long-Evans and Brattleboro ratsExperimental Neurology, 1989
- Concomitant Increases in the Levels of Choline and Free Fatty Acids in Rat Brain: Evidence Supporting the Seizure‐Induced Hydrolysis of PhosphatidylcholineJournal of Neurochemistry, 1987
- Quantitative film autoradiography for tritium: Methodological considerationsBrain Research, 1985
- Resolution-limiting factors in 2-deoxyglucose autoradiography. I. Factors other than DiffusionBrain Research, 1983
- Quantitative measurement of local cerebral metabolic rate for glucose utilizing tritiated 2-deoxyglucoseBrain Research, 1981
- CHANGES IN FREE FATTY ACIDS OF BRAIN BY DRUG‐INDUCED CONVULSIONS, ELECTROSHOCK AND ANAESTHESIAJournal of Neurochemistry, 1971
- Increased levels of brain free fatty acids after electroconvulsive shockLife Sciences, 1970
- New Tables for Multiple Comparisons with a ControlPublished by JSTOR ,1964
- Tritium in RadioautographyScience, 1951