An improved extraction method of 3-oh fatty acids for environmental reconstruction

Author(s):  
Chanamon Panbut

<p>3-hydroxy or beta-hydroxy fatty acids produced by Gram-negative bacteria are a novel proxy for assessment of the environmental changes. These compounds composed of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Lipid A, a core polysaccharide region, and an O-antigen polysaccharide chain. The improved method for the 3-hydroxy fatty acids extraction was proposed in this study. The 12 soil samples collected from the eastern US border along the coastline from Maine to Florida were generally processed by acid hydrolysis, methylation, total lipid extraction, and solid-phase chromatography, respectively. Fatty acids eventually can be separated from the main part of LPS and combined with a methyl group. However, in the stage of acid hydrolysis, the temperature was decreased to 55 °C, and heating time was extended in order to prevent the broken of volatile compounds and diminish the relative abundance of 3-OH fatty acids. The higher abundance of interested 3-OH fatty acids for the environmental reconstruction can potentially be extracted by this improvement than the classical protocol. This research will be further compared in terms of cost, experimental time and completeness of data between these two methods.</p>

1995 ◽  
Vol 36 (41) ◽  
pp. 7455-7458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koichi Fukase ◽  
Wen-Chi Liu ◽  
Yasuo Suda ◽  
Masato Oikawa ◽  
Akira Wada ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 17 (20) ◽  
pp. 2839-2841 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annalisa Guaragna ◽  
Mauro De Nisco ◽  
Silvana Pedatella ◽  
Giovanni Palumbo

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2281
Author(s):  
Kazuyoshi Kawahara

Lipid A of Gram-negative bacteria is known to represent a central role for the immunological activity of endotoxin. Chemical structure and biosynthetic pathways as well as specific receptors on phagocytic cells had been clarified by the beginning of the 21st century. Although the lipid A of enterobacteria including Escherichia coli share a common structure, other Gram-negative bacteria belonging to various classes of the phylum Proteobacteria and other taxonomical groups show wide variety of lipid A structure with relatively decreased endotoxic activity compared to that of E. coli. The structural diversity is produced from the difference of chain length of 3-hydroxy fatty acids and non-hydroxy fatty acids linked to their hydroxyl groups. In some bacteria, glucosamine in the backbone is substituted by another amino sugar, or phosphate groups bound to the backbone are modified. The variation of structure is also introduced by the enzymes that can modify electrostatic charges or acylation profiles of lipid A during or after its synthesis. Furthermore, lipid A structure can be artificially modified or engineered by the disruption and introduction of biosynthetic genes especially those of acyltransferases. These technologies may produce novel vaccine adjuvants or antagonistic drugs derived from endotoxin in the future.


2011 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Choma ◽  
Iwona Komaniecka

Lipopolysaccharides of seven Bradyrhizobium strains and three whole-cell fatty acid preparations from bacteria isolated from nodules of Sarothamnus scoparius (common broom) were studied for the presence of very long chain (ω-1)-hydroxy fatty acids. Several such fatty acids were identified. Among them, straight-chain as well as mono- and dimethyl branched acids with chains in the range from 26 to 34 carbon atoms were found. Pyrrolidides and 4,4-dimethyloxazoline derivatives were used to determine the branching position. Carbons at the (ω-10) and/or (ω-11) positions in alkyl chains were points of attachment of methyl groups. These data complete the structure of bradyrhizobial lipid A with important details. The obtained results can be applied in the chemotaxonomy of Bradyrhizobium.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2006 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. S. Soydan ◽  
H. S. Dokmetas ◽  
M. Cetin ◽  
A. Koyuncu ◽  
E. Kaptanoglu ◽  
...  

β-hydroxy fatty acids are a major component of lipid A moiety of lipopolysaccaride. We aimed to investigate the role of freeβ-hydroxy fatty acids on inflammation, as well as to evaluate their effects on cytokine release from human blood cells, and whether they exist in plasma of patients with chronic inflammatory diseases with/without insulin resistance. Peripheral venous blood was incubated withβ-hydroxy lauric andβ-hydroxy myristic acids (each 100 ng, 1μg, 10μg/mL) up to 24 hours. Cytokines were measured from culture media and plasma. Free fatty acids and biochemical parameters were also measured from patients' plasma. Onlyβ-hydroxy lauric acid significantly stimulated interleukin-6 production at 10μg/mL compared to control (533.9±218.1versus438.3±219.6pg/mL,P<.05). However, freeβ-hydroxy lauric and myristic acids were not found in patients' plasma. Therefore, freeβ-hydroxy lauric and myristic acids do not seem to have a role on sterile inflammation in chronic inflammatory diseases associated with insulin resistance.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Gorka ◽  
Alberto Canarini ◽  
Bruna Imai ◽  
Georg Teischinger ◽  
Sean Darcy ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;Phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) are widely used as biomarkers for soil microbial biomass. In more recent years, neutral lipid fatty acids (NLFA) have additionally been used as storage biomarkers. Both lipid classes are usually separated via silica solid phase extraction (SPE) after extraction with a mixture of chloroform, methanol and citric acid buffer. However, in recent years several studies reported incomplete or inconsistent separation of lipid classes, depending on minor differences in the polarity of the eluents used during the SPE. Moreover, while PLFA profiles have been tested on microbial pure cultures, the taxonomic specificity of NLFA is only assumed to equal that of PLFA.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Complementary to fatty acid based biomarkers, many studies quantify ergosterol as a reliable indicator for fungal biomass because the fungal-specific PLFA 18:1&amp;#969;9 and 18:2&amp;#969;6,9 also occur in plants, which compromises their use for detecting fungal biomass in plant tissue (for example mycorrhizal fungi in plant roots). Measuring ergosterol requires an additional extraction method, but existing protocols include silylation for further gas chromatography analysis and are thus not compatible with determining &lt;sup&gt;13&lt;/sup&gt;C by IRMS.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Here, we aimed to quantify the recovery of polar and non-polar lipid classes as well as ergosterol following lipid extraction and silica SPE fractionation. We used pure standards of representative phospholipids, glycolipids and neutral lipids with unique fatty acid chain lengths for unambiguous identification of the lipid class after SPE. Lipid fractionation was tested on a 96-well SPE plate with different eluents. Subsequently, we applied the modified method to characterize lipid fractions in microbial pure cultures from bacteria (Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria), and saprotrophic and ectomycorrhizal fungi (Ascomycota, Basidiomycota).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Separation of lipid classes was achieved by successively eluting NLFA and sterols with a mixture of chloroform and ethanol (v:v = 98:2), glycolipid fatty acids (GLFA) with acetone, and PLFA with a mixture of methanol, chloroform and water (v:v:v = 5:5:1). GLFA were partially recovered in the NLFA or PLFA fraction depending on the nature of the lipid, which should be considered when interpreting PLFA data. Ergosterol recovery was unaffected by subsequent mild alkaline methanolysis of the NLFA fraction in which it was collected, allowing further analysis of both lipid classes in the same mixture. The gas-chromatographic method may be extended to elute both NLFA and (non-silylated) sterols in one run, assuming that the concentration of ergosterol in soil samples is high enough. Therefore, the method can be optimized by using an internal standard added to the NLFA fraction and simultaneously quantify ergosterol. Finally, we show how different lipid classes and attached fatty acid chains distribute in pure cultures of soil micro-organisms.&lt;/p&gt;


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document