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Original Article

Radiation Studies of Acholeplasma Laidlawii: the Role of Membrane Composition

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Pages 405-412 | Received 28 Apr 1983, Accepted 01 Jul 1983, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Summary

Acholeplasma laidlawii, a mycoplasma, is unable to synthesize unsaturated fatty acids but it will incorporate them into its plasma membrane if they are supplied exogeneously. Thus the fatty acid composition of the cell membrane can be defined by growing the organism in media containing specific fatty acids. We obtained cells with predominantly one type of unsaturated fatty acid (either oleic, linoleic or linolenic acid) or cells with only saturated fatty acid in the cell membrane. The cells were irradiated with 7 MeV electrons and the effect of membrane fatty acid composition on cell survival was examined. At 200 Gy/min and 0·5°C (melting ice) there was little difference in the radiation sensitivities of the cells grown in unsaturated fatty acids either in aerated or anoxic radiation conditions. However, the cells containing saturated fatty acids irradiated in anoxic conditions were markedly more sensitive than the cells containing unsaturated fatty acids.

At 200 Gy/min and 37°C the two types of cells were of similar sensitivity both in aerated and anoxic radiation conditions.

At 5 Gy/min at 0·5°C the cells containing linolenic acid (18:3) were less sensitive than those containing solely saturated fatty acids. However, at 5 Gy/min at 37°C there was no difference in sensitivity between these two types of cell.

Our results strongly argue against the involvement of lipid peroxidation as a molecular change leading to cell death.

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