Abstract
Summary
In rat liver slices respiring in a buffered medium containing suitable radioactive precursors, the acetone-insoluble lipide (phospholipide) is labeled metabolically. Exposure of the animals to an environmental temperature of 4–5° C for the 12 days prior to the experiment caused a decrease in the subsequent labeling of the phospholipide from acetate- 1 - C14, but no significant change when inorganic P32 was the source of the radioactivity. Exposure of the rats to — 5 ° C for the 3 hours immediately prior to the experiment caused a decrease in the labeling of the phospholipide when the radioactivity was derived from acetate-1-C14, but no change when it was derived from glycerol-1-C14, glycine-2-C14 or inorganic P32.
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