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  • Title: Alpha-fetoprotein-mediated uptake of fatty acids by human T lymphocytes.
    Author: Torres JM, Anel A, Uriel J.
    Journal: J Cell Physiol; 1992 Mar; 150(3):456-62. PubMed ID: 1371512.
    Abstract:
    The binding to resting and activated T lymphocytes of two radiolabelled fatty acids (oleic and arachidonic) was studied in the presence or in the absence of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) as carrier protein. Fatty acid binding by resting and activated T lymphocytes was determined at 4 degrees C as a function of the concentration of fatty acid and AFP. Under the conditions employed, the following observations were made: (1) in the presence of AFP, fatty acids (oleic and arachidonic acid) are bound to cells by a two-component pathway; one is a saturable process, evidenced when the fatty acid to AFP (FA/AFP) molar ratio was fixed at 1 and the concentration of the fatty acid and the protein varied from 0.1 to 3.2 microM, and the second is a nonsaturable function of FA/AFP molar ratio and was linearly related to the unbound fatty acid concentration in the medium over the entire range studied; (2) in the absence of AFP, the nonsaturable process appears to be the only component of fatty acid binding; 3) at all tested concentrations of free (unbound) fatty acid in the medium, net fatty acid binding by either resting or activated T cells was considerably greater in the presence than in the absence of AFP; (4) in the presence of AFP, fatty acid binding was much higher in activated T cells than in resting T cells, whereas in the absence of AFP, nonsignificant differences were observed between activated and resting T cells; and (5) the time course of fatty acid and AFP binding at 4 degrees C revealed that, at equilibrium, the number of fatty acid molecules bound to the cell was much greater than that of AFP suggesting an accelerated dissociation of the fatty acid upon interaction of the AFP-fatty acid complex with putative cell receptors. It is concluded to the existence of an AFP/AFP-receptor pathway that facilitates the binding of fatty acids to T lymphocytes, particularly upon their blast transformation. This pathway may fulfill the increased requirement for fatty acids characteristic of proliferating cells and may serve to regulate the endocytosis of fatty acids with modulatory effects on lymphocyte function and to protect cells from their cytotoxic potential when internalized in excess.
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