(n−3) and (n−6) polyunsaturated fatty acids in the phosphoglycerides of salt‐secreting epithelia from two marine fish species

Abstract
Fatty acid analyses were carried out on phosphoglycerides isolated from microsomal fractions of the rectal gland of the dogfish,Scyliorthinus canicula, and gills of the cod,Gadus morhua. Ratios of (n−3)/(n−6) polyunsaturated fatty acids were ca. 10 for phosphatidylcholine, (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine (PS) from cod gills, reflecting high concentrations of 20∶5 (n−3) and 22∶6(n−3). The ratio for phosphatidylinositol (PI) from cod gills was 1.3, reflecting high concentrations of 20∶4(n−6) as well as (n−3) polyunsaturates. PC, PE and PS from rectal glands all had much lower (n−3)/(n−6) ratios than in cod gills, reflecting higher concentrations of 20∶4(n−6), but the lowest ratio was again present in PI. The latter phospholipid had high concentrations of 18∶0 in both tissues. The relative constancy of the fatty acid composition of PI in the two salt‐secreting tissues and its similarity to mammalian phospholipids is considered to reflect its specialized role in biomembranes.