Skip to main content

Stereochemistry of Endogenous Palmitic Acid Ester of 9-Hydroxystearic Acid and Relevance of Absolute Configuration to Regulation.

Citation
Nelson, A. T., et al. “Stereochemistry Of Endogenous Palmitic Acid Ester Of 9-Hydroxystearic Acid And Relevance Of Absolute Configuration To Regulation.”. Journal Of The American Chemical Society, pp. 4943-4947.
Center Boston Area
Author Andrew T Nelson, Matthew J Kolar, Qian Chu, Ismail Syed, Barbara B Kahn, Alan Saghatelian, Dionicio Siegel
Abstract

Lipids have fundamental roles in the structure, energetics, and signaling of cells and organisms. The recent discovery of fatty acid esters of hydroxy fatty acids (FAHFAs), lipids with potent antidiabetic and anti-inflammatory activities, indicates that our understanding of the composition of lipidome and the function of lipids is incomplete. The ability to synthesize and test FAHFAs was critical in elucidating the roles of these lipids, but these studies were performed with racemic mixtures, and the role of stereochemistry remains unexplored. Here, we synthesized the R- and S- palmitic acid ester of 9-hydroxystearic acid (R-9-PAHSA, S-9-PAHSA). Access to highly enantioenriched PAHSAs enabled the development of a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method to separate and quantify R- and S-9-PAHSA, and this approach identified R-9-PAHSA as the predominant stereoisomer that accumulates in adipose tissues from transgenic mice where FAHFAs were first discovered. Furthermore, biochemical analysis of 9-PAHSA biosynthesis and degradation indicate that the enzymes and pathways for PAHSA production are stereospecific, with cell lines favoring the production of R-9-PAHSA and carboxyl ester lipase (CEL), a PAHSA degradative enzyme, selectively hydrolyzing S-9-PAHSA. These studies highlight the role of stereochemistry in the production and degradation of PAHSAs and define the endogenous stereochemistry of 9-PAHSA in adipose tissue. This information will be useful in the identification and characterization of the pathway responsible for PAHSA biosynthesis, and access to enantiopure PAHSAs will elucidate the role of stereochemistry in PAHSA activity and metabolism in vivo.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume
139
Issue
13
Number of Pages
4943-4947
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1520-5126
DOI
10.1021/jacs.7b01269
Alternate Journal
J. Am. Chem. Soc.
PMID
28350171
PMCID
PMC5568760
Download citation