Subfractions of rat liver microsomes (rough, smooth I, and smooth II), isolated in a cation-containing sucrose gradient system, were analyzed. After removal of adsorbed and luminal protein, these subfractions had the same phospholipid/protein ratio, about 0.40. Both the classes and the relative amounts of phospholipids were similar in the three subfractions, but the relative amounts of neutral lipids (predominantly free cholesterol and triglycerides) were higher in smooth I and especially in smooth II than in rough microsomes. Various pieces of evidence indicate that the neutral lipids are tightly bound to the membranes. Glycerol-(3)H was incorporated into the phospholipids of the rough and smooth I microsomes significantly faster than into those of the smooth II membranes; (32)P incorporation followed a similar but less pronounced pattern. Acetate-(3)H was incorporated into the free cholesterol of smooth I microsomes only half as fast as into the other two subfractions. Injection of phenobarbital increased the cellular phospholipid and neutral lipid content in the rough and smooth I, but not in the smooth II microsomes. Consequently, the neutral lipid/phospholipid ratio of all three subfractions remained unchanged after phenobarbital treatment. It is concluded that the membranes of the rough and the two smooth microsomal subfractions from rat liver have a similar phospholipid composition, but are dissimilar in their neutral lipid content and in the incorporation rate of precursors into membrane lipids.

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