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Positional isomers of unsaturated fatty acids in rat liver lipids
Author(s) -
Schmitz Brigitte,
Murawski Uwe,
Pflüger Manfred,
Egge Heinz
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
lipids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1558-9307
pISSN - 0024-4201
DOI - 10.1007/bf02533353
Subject(s) - chemistry , trimethylsilyl , double bond , osmium tetroxide , fatty acid , polyunsaturated fatty acid , hydroxylation , lipidology , structural isomer , chromatography , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , physics , electron microscope , optics , enzyme
The fatty acids of liver lipids from rats raised on a fat free diet from the 30th to the 90th day after birth were analyzed with special regard to the detection of positional isomers of mono‐, di‐, tri‐, and tetraenoic fatty acids. The methyl esters obtained after transesterification of total lipids were separated by argentation chromatography into five fractions: I saturated, II monoenoic, III dienoic, IV dienoic nonmethylene interrupted, V triand tetraenoic fatty acid esters. After hydroxylation of the double bonds with osmium tetroxide, the analysis of the poly‐O‐trimethylsilyl derivatives by gas liquid chromatography on S.C.O.T. columns combined with mass spectrometry revealed the presence of 19 monoenoic, 15 dienoic, and 9 trienoic as well as 3 tetraenoic fatty acid isomers including the normally occurring representatives of the (n−3), (n−6), (n−7), and (n−9) fatty acid families. The majority of the identified isomers can be coordinated to one of these families like 7–16∶1; 11–20∶1; 6,9–18∶2; 8,11–20∶2; 5,11–20∶2; 5,8,11–20∶3; 7,10,13–22∶3 to the (n−9) family, 11–18∶1; 13–20∶1; 5,11–18∶2; 7,13–20∶2; 6,11–18∶2; 6,9–16∶2; 8, 11–18∶2; 10,13–20∶2; 5,8,11–18∶3; 7,10,13–20∶3; 4,7,10,13–20∶4 to the (n−7) family and 11,14–20∶2; 5,11,14–20∶3; 6,9,12–18∶3; 8,11,14–20∶3; 5,8,11,14–20∶4; 7,10,13,16–22∶4 to the (n−6) family. All these naturally occuring isomers can be placed into a network of desaturation and chain elongation steps which allows certain conclusions about the substrate specificity of the Δ6‐, Δ5‐and Δ4‐desaturase systems. The great number of isomers found in the (n−7) family indicates that the members of this family are actively metabolized in partial essential fatty acid deficiency.