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  lüll Transcellular biosynthesis of eicosanoids Sala A; Folco G; Murphy RCPharmacol Rep  2010[May]; 62 (3): 503-10The metabolism of arachidonic acid into biologically active compounds involves  the sequential activity of a number of enzymes, sometimes showing a unique  expression profile in different cells. The main metabolic pathways, namely the  cyclooxygenases and the 5-lipoxygenase, both generate chemically unstable  intermediates: prostaglandin (PG) H(2) and leukotriene (LT) A(4), respectively.  These are transformed by secondary enzymes into a variety of chemical structures  known collectively as the lipid mediators. Although some cells express all the  enzymes necessary for the production of biologically active compounds, it has  been shown that eicosanoids are often the result of cell-cell interactions  involving the transfer of biosynthetic intermediates, such as the chemically  reactive PGH(2) and LTA(4), between cells. This process has been defined as the  transcellular pathway of eicosanoid biosynthesis and requires both a donor cell  to synthesize and release one component of the biosynthetic cascade and an  accessory cell to take up that intermediate and process it into the final  biologically active product. This review will summarize the evidence for  transcellular biosynthetic events, occurring in isolated cell preparations,  complex isolated organ systems, and in vivo, that result in the production of  prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and lipoxins.|Animals[MESH]|Arachidonic Acid/biosynthesis/metabolism[MESH]|Cell Communication/*physiology[MESH]|Eicosanoids/*biosynthesis[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Leukotriene A4/metabolism[MESH]|Leukotrienes/biosynthesis[MESH]|Metabolic Networks and Pathways[MESH]|Models, Biological[MESH]|Prostaglandin H2/metabolism[MESH]|Prostaglandins/biosynthesis[MESH]|Tissue Distribution[MESH] |