Infante J P
FEBS Lett. 1987 Apr 6;214(1):149-52. doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(87)80031-5.
The activity of CDP-choline-dependent glycerophosphorylcholine synthetase (CDP-choline:sn-3-glycerophosphate cholinetransferase), a newly discovered enzyme involved in the recently proposed pathways of acyl-specific phosphatidylcholine synthesis, is reported in rat liver. Endogenous CDP-choline, synthesized via the CMP-driven back reaction of phosphorylcholine transferase, is also shown to be a choline donor for this glycerophosphorylcholine synthetase. The function of glycerophosphorylcholine as an intermediate in phosphatidylcholine synthesis is demonstrated by specific isotope trapping whereby unlabelled glycerophosphorylcholine inhibited label incorporation from sn-[14C]glycerol-3-phosphate into phosphatidylcholine in mouse gastrocnemius, a tissue that is essentially devoid of the cytidine pathway for phosphatidylcholine synthesis and uses a non-allelic glycerophosphorylcholine synthetase (exogenous PC:sn-3-glycerophosphate cholinetransferase) in the synthesis of glycerophosphorylcholine.