| Literature DB >> 27366754 |
Abstract
Lipid oxidation-derived carbonyl compounds are associated with the development of various physiological disorders. Formation of most of these products has recently been suggested to require further reactions of oxygen with lipid hydroperoxides. However, in rat and human tissues, the formation of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal is greatly elevated during hypoxic/ischemic conditions. Furthermore, a previous study found an unexpected result that the decomposition of a phosphatidylcholine (PC) bearing the 13-hydroperoxide of linoleic acid under a nitrogen atmosphere afforded 9-oxononanoyl-PC rather than 13-oxo-9,11-tridecadienoyl-PC as the main aldehydic PC. In the present study, products of the anaerobic decomposition of a PC bearing the 9-hydroperoxide of linoleic acid were analysed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. 9-Oxononanoyl-PC (ONA-PC) and several well-known bioactive aldehydes including 12-oxo-9-hydroperoxy-(or oxo or hydroxy)-10-dodecenoyl-PCs were detected. Hydrolysis of the oxidized PC products, methylation of the acids obtained thereby, and subsequent gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy with electron impact ionization further confirmed structures of some of the key aldehydic PCs. Novel, hydroxyl radical-dependent mechanisms of formation of ONA-PC and peroxyl-radical dependent mechanisms of formation of the rest of the aldehydes are proposed. The latter mechanisms will mainly be relevant to tissue injury under hypoxic/anoxic conditions, while the former are relevant under both normoxia and hypoxia/anoxia.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27366754 PMCID: PMC4913024 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8218439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Scheme 1Some major products of decomposition of the 13- and the 9-hydroperoxides of linoleic acid (13-LA-OOH 1 and 9-LA-OOH 2, resp.).
Figure 1ESI-MS spectra obtained after decomposition of PC-9-LAOOH for 4 hours in the presence of Fe2+ under (a) anaerobic and (b) aerobic conditions.
Scheme 2Suggested conversion of PC-9-LA-OOH 11 to secondary products by in-cage reaction of alkoxyl radical 12 or epoxy allyl radical 13 with ∙OH formed by a reverse Fenton reaction betwen Fe3+ and −OH.
Scheme 3Proposed anaerobic pathways for conversion of PC-9-LA-OOH 11 to aldehyde-PCs other than 9-oxononanoyl-PC. Conversion of 32 to 33 may begin with Fe2+-mediated or spontaneous cleavage of 32 to the corresponding alkoxyl radical, which cyclizes to form an epoxy allylic radical, which adds a peroxide radical, whose decomposition affords 33.
Methyl esters detected by GC-MS after hydrolysis of PC-9-LA-OOH decomposition products under anaerobic conditions.
| Compound | R.T (min) | Amplitude (%) | Key fragment ions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Methyl 9-oxononanoic acid | 13.23 | 25 | 43 (48), 55 (65), 69 (30), 74 (100), 87 (65), 111 (40), 143 (20), 155 (12), 158 (6) |
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| Nonanedioic acid dimethyl ester | 15.03 | 27 | 43 (48), 55 (100), 83 (90), 97 (37), 111 (52), 124 (23), 143 (23), 152 (62), 185 (38) |
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| Methyl 8-(2-furyl)-octanoate | 19.44 | 12.5 | 41 (12), 53 (20), 67 (6), 81 (100), 95 (50), 123 (10), 193 (2), 224 (5) |
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| Methyl 9,12-dioxo-10-dodecenoate | 20.12 | 8 | 41 (20), 55 (85), 98 (100), 130 (63), 181 (5), 209 (25), 240 (3) |
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| Methyl stearate | 22.21 | 100 | 43 (50), 55 (30), 69 (16), 74 (100), 87 (62), 143 (13), 199 (10), 255 (12), 298 (11) |
Scheme 4Suggested pathway for the conversion of 9-oxo-10,11-octadecadienoyl-PC 15 to azelaoyl-PC 47 under aerobic conditions.
Scheme 5The conversion of PC-9-LA-OOH to epoxy-oxo derivative 49 under aerobic conditions.