Biology Asked by biolomist on July 8, 2021
I have found out that rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) produces membranes. Therefore it has to produce phospholipids, but I thought that the smooth ER was where the synthesis of lipids occurs.
What specific part of the ER produce phospholipids?
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is one of the largest continuous membrane bound organelle of the cell.
The rough ER and smooth ER share the same membrane and some membrane proteins can diffuse between them. At the same time there are specific markers for ER sheets (rough ER) and ER tubules (smooth ER). The terminology of rough and smooth come from early electron microscopy and biochemical work where large amount of ribosomes (polyribosomes) were found on the rough endoplasmic reticulum membrane, and less on the smooth. These membranes can be biochemically separated one being more heavy (RER because of attached polyribosomes) than the other.
In general the ER has several functions: protein synthesis, calcium storage, entry of the secretory pathway and lipid synthesis. It can not only produce phospholipids but also a large array of precursors for steroids and neutral lipids.
This is a topic of research itself but it is general thought/accepted that the smooth ER is the one responsible for the synthesis of phospholipids.
In reality, there are multiple ways to produce phospholipids (from recycled membranes, from lipid droplet stores, etc) and there are multiple possible pathways for producing lipids and lipids precursors (de novo synthesis). This also implies that there are multiple enzymes involve in this process. Now these enzymes are often ER membrane proteins and they can but do not always specifically localize particularly to one part of the ER.
Answered by Dr. H. Lecter on July 8, 2021
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