| Literature DB >> 28071669 |
Stefan Schuster1, Maximilian Fichtner1, Severin Sasso2.
Abstract
In lipid biochemistry, a fundamental question is how the potential number of fatty acids increases with their chain length. Here, we show that it grows according to the famous Fibonacci numbers when cis/trans isomerism is neglected. Since the ratio of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers tends to the Golden section, 1.618, organisms can increase fatty acid variability approximately by that factor per carbon atom invested. Moreover, we show that, under consideration of cis/trans isomerism and/or of modification by hydroxy and/or oxo groups, diversity can be described by generalized Fibonacci numbers (e.g. Pell numbers). For the sake of easy comprehension, we deliberately build the proof on the recursive definitions of these number series. Our results should be of interest for mass spectrometry, combinatorial chemistry, synthetic biology, patent applications, use of fatty acids as biomarkers and the theory of evolution. The recursive definition of Fibonacci numbers paves the way to construct all structural formulas of fatty acids in an automated way.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28071669 PMCID: PMC5223158 DOI: 10.1038/srep39821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Fatty acid structures.
(a) Unmodified fatty acids (see main text for definition). All variants are shown for n = 1 up to n = 4, whereas select examples are shown for n = 18. (b) Examples of oxidized fatty acids with modifications shown in red.
Figure 2Illustration of the recursive enumeration method. Red lines, bonds added during the procedure.
Larger solid dots, variable chain length. Assume we know all x from k = 1 up to k = n and wish to calculate x. We can certainly extend the molecule by linking one carbon to the n-th carbon by a single bond (left-hand side). Moreover, we can add two carbons to the molecule with k = n−1, such that carbons n−1 and n are linked by a single bond and carbons n and n + 1, by a double bond (right-hand side). Combining the two procedures (starting at n−1 and at n), we arrive at Eq. (2). There is no overlap between the molecules thus generated because the x molecules generated by starting from length n have a single bond at the methyl end, while the x molecules generated by starting from length n−1 have a double bond at that end. Moreover, all possibilities of extending the molecules according to the defined rules are covered.
Number of fatty acids (FAs) as a function of chain length n for n = 1–22.
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | |
| 2 | 5 | 10 | 2 | 5 | 10 | 2 | |
| 3 | 12 | 33 | 4 | 14 | 36 | 3 | |
| 5 | 29 | 109 | 8 | 38 | 128 | 5 | |
| 8 | 70 | 360 | 16 | 104 | 456 | 8 | |
| 13 | 169 | 1,189 | 32 | 284 | 1,624 | 13 | |
| 21 | 408 | 3,927 | 64 | 776 | 5,784 | 21 | |
| 34 | 985 | 12,970 | 128 | 2,120 | 20,600 | 34 | |
| 55 | 2,378 | 42,837 | 256 | 5,792 | 73,368 | 55 | |
| 89 | 5,741 | 1.415 × 105 | 512 | 15,824 | 2.613 × 105 | 89 | |
| 144 | 13,860 | 4.673 × 105 | 1,024 | 43,232 | 9.306 × 105 | 144 | |
| 233 | 33,461 | 1.543 × 106 | 2,048 | 1.181 × 105 | 3.315 × 106 | 233 | |
| 377 | 80,782 | 5.097 × 106 | 4,096 | 3.227 × 105 | 1.180 × 107 | 377 | |
| 610 | 1.950 × 105 | 1.684 × 107 | 8,192 | 8.816 × 105 | 4.204 × 107 | 609 | |
| 987 | 4.708 × 105 | 5.560 × 107 | 16,384 | 2.409 × 106 | 1.497 × 108 | 979 | |
| 1,597 | 1.137 × 106 | 1.836 × 108 | 32,768 | 6.580 × 106 | 5.333 × 108 | 1,560 | |
| 2,584 | 2.744 × 106 | 6.065 × 108 | 65,536 | 1.798 × 107 | 1.899 × 109 | 2,455 | |
| 4,181 | 6.625 × 106 | 2.003 × 109 | 1.311 × 105 | 4.912 × 107 | 6.765 × 109 | 3,805 | |
| 6,765 | 1.599 × 107 | 6.616 × 109 | 2.621 × 105 | 1.342 × 108 | 2.409 × 1010 | 5,798 | |
| 10,946 | 3.861 × 107 | 2.185 × 1010 | 5.243 × 105 | 3.666 × 108 | 8.581 × 1010 | 8,679 | |
| 17,711 | 9.322 × 107 | 7.217 × 1010 | 1.049 × 106 | 1.002 × 109 | 3.056 × 1011 | 12,761 |
The following cases are distinguished: unmodified FAs with cis-/trans-isomers combined (x, Fibonacci numbers), unmodified FAs with cis-/trans-isomers considered separately (u, Sessa numbers), modified FAs that can have either oxo or hydroxy groups with cis-/trans-isomers combined (y, Pell or 2-Fibonacci numbers), modified FAs that can have either oxo or hydroxy groups with cis-/trans-isomers considered separately (v, a form of generalized Fibonacci numbers), modified FAs that can have both oxo and hydroxy groups with cis-/trans-isomers combined (z, 3-Fibonacci numbers), modified FAs that can have both oxo and hydroxy groups with cis-/trans-isomers considered separately (w, another form of generalized Fibonacci numbers), and unmodified FAs with at most six double bonds and cis-/trans-isomers combined (q).
Unmodified FAs with cis-/trans-isomers combined and neighbouring double bonds permitted are also described by un. A graphical representation is provided in Supplementary Fig. 1.