3-Hydroxydodecanoic acid
(Synonyms: 3-羟基月桂酸) 目录号 : GC30642A hydroxy fatty acid
Cas No.:1883-13-2
Sample solution is provided at 25 µL, 10mM.
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3-hydroxy Lauric acid is a hydroxylated fatty acid that is found in bacteria as well as Pseudosuberites and D. calyx sea sponges.1,2,3,4 It has antifungal activity against a panel of seven fungi (MICs = 10-50 μg/ml).3 3-hydroxy Lauric acid acts as a partial agonist of GPR84 receptors in vitro (EC50 = 5.24 μM).5 [Matreya, LLC. Catalog No. 1731]
1.Kim, M.C., Pak, S.H., Rim, S.G., et al.Luteolibacter arcticus sp. nov., isolated from high Arctic tundra soil, and emended description of the genus LuteolibacterInt. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol.65(Pt. 6)1922-1928(2015) 2.Panda, S., Bandyopadhyay, P.K., and Chatterjee, S.N.Characterization of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PB112 (JN996498) isolated from infected Labeo bata (Hamilton) by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysisAfrican J. Biotechnol.12(4)400-405(2013) 3.He, R., Wakimoto, T., Egami, Y., et al.Heterologously expressed β-hydroxyl fatty acids from a metagenomic library of a marine spongeBioorg. Med. Chem. Lett.22(24)7322-7325(2012) 4.Barnathan, G., Kornprobst, J.-M., Doumenq, P., et al.Sponge fatty acids, 5. Characterization of complete series of 2-hydroxy long-chain fatty acids in phospholipids of two Senegalese marine sponges from the family suberitidae: Pseudosuberites sp. and Suberites massaJ. Nat. Prod.56(12)2104-2113(2004) 5.Kaspersen, M.H., Jenkins, L., Dunlop, J., et al.Succinct synthesis of saturated hydroxy fatty acids and in vitro evaluation of all hydroxylauric acids on FFA1, FFA4, and GPR84Med. Chem. Commun.8(6)1360-1365(2017)
Cas No. | 1883-13-2 | SDF | |
别名 | 3-羟基月桂酸 | ||
Canonical SMILES | CCCCCCCCCC(O)CC(O)=O | ||
分子式 | C12H24O3 | 分子量 | 216.32 |
溶解度 | DMSO : 100 mg/mL (462.28 mM; Need ultrasonic) | 储存条件 | Store at -20°C |
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1 mg | 5 mg | 10 mg | |
1 mM | 4.6228 mL | 23.1139 mL | 46.2278 mL |
5 mM | 0.9246 mL | 4.6228 mL | 9.2456 mL |
10 mM | 0.4623 mL | 2.3114 mL | 4.6228 mL |
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2.
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Microbial production of 3-hydroxydodecanoic acid by pha operon and fadBA knockout mutant of Pseudomonas putida KT2442 harboring tesB gene
To produce extracellular chiral 3-hydroxyacyl acids (3HA) by fermentation, a novel pathway was constructed by expressing tesB gene encoding thioesterase II into Pseudomonas putida KTOY01, which was a polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) synthesis operon knockout mutant. 3HA mixtures of 0.35 g/l consisting of 3-hydroxyhexanoate, 3-hydroxyoctanoate, 3-hydroxydecanoate, and 3-hydroxydodecanoate (3HDD) were produced in shake-flask study using dodecanoate as a sole carbon source. Additional knockout of fadB and fadA genes encoding 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase in P. putida KTOY01 led to the weakening of the beta-oxidation pathway. The fadBA and PHA synthesis operon knockout mutant P. putida KTOY07 expressing tesB gene produced 2.44 g/l 3HA, significantly more than that of the beta-oxidation intact mutant. The 3HA mixture contained 90 mol% 3HDD as a dominant component. A fed-batch fermentation process carried out in a 6-l automatic fermentor produced 7.27 g/l extracellular 3HA containing 96 mol% fraction of 3HDD after 28 h of growth. For the first time, it became possible to produce 3HDD-dominant 3HA monomers.
Structural and catalytic properties of the peroxygenase P450 enzyme CYP152K6 from Bacillus methanolicus
The CYP152 family of cytochrome P450 enzymes (P450s or CYPs) are bacterial peroxygenases that use hydrogen peroxide to drive hydroxylation and decarboxylation of fatty acid substrates. We have expressed and purified a novel CYP152 family member - CYP152K6 from the methylotroph Bacillus methanolicus MGA3. CYP152K6 was characterized using spectroscopic, analytical and structural methods. CYP152K6, like its peroxygenase counterpart P450SPα (CYP152B1) from Sphingomonas paucimobilis, does not undergo significant fatty acid-induced perturbation to the heme spectrum, with the exception of a minor Soret shift observed on binding dodecanoic acid. However, CYP152K6 purified from an E. coli expression system was crystallized and its structure was determined to 1.3 ? with tetradecanoic acid bound. No lipids were present in conditions used for crystallogenesis, and thus CYP152K6 must form a complex by incorporating the fatty acid from E. coli cells. Turnover studies with dodecanoic acid revealed several products, with 2-hydroxydodecanoic acid as the major product and much smaller quantities of 3-hydroxydodecanoic acid. Secondary turnover products were undec-1-en-1-ol, 2-hydroxydodec-2-enoic acid and 2,3-dihydroxydodecanoic acid. This is the first report of a 2,3-hydroxylated fatty acid product made by a peroxygenase P450, with the dihydroxylated product formed by CYP152K6-catalyzed 3-hydroxylation of 2-hydroxydodecanoic acid, but not by 2-hydroxylation of 3-hydroxydodecanoic acid.
The chain length of biologically produced (R)-3-hydroxyalkanoic acid affects biological activity and structure of anti-cancer peptides
Conjugation of DP18L peptide with (R)-3-hydroxydecanoic acid, derived from the biopolymer polyhydroxyalkanoate, enhances its anti-cancer activity (O'Connor et al., 2013. Biomaterials 34, 2710-2718). However, it is unknown if other (R)-3-hydroxyalkanoic acids (R3HAs) can enhance peptide activity, if chain length affects enhancement, and what effect R3HAs have on peptide structure. Here we show that the degree of enhancement of peptide (DP18L) anti-cancer activity by R3HAs is carbon chain length dependent. In all but one example the R3HA conjugated peptides were more active against cancer cells than the unconjugated peptides. However, R3HAs with 9 and 10 carbons were most effective at improving DP18L activity. DP18L peptide variant DP17L, missing a hydrophobic amino acid (leucine residue 4) exhibited lower efficacy against MiaPaCa cells. Circular dichroism analysis showed DP17L had a lower alpha helix content and the conjugation of any R3HA ((R)-3-hydroxyhexanoic acid to (R)-3-hydroxydodecanoic acid) to DP17L returned the helix content back to levels of DP18L. However (R)-3-hydroxyhexanoic did not enhance the anti-cancer activity of DP17L and at least 7 carbons were needed in the R3HA to enhance activity of D17L. DP17L needs a longer chain R3HA to achieve the same activity as DP18L conjugated to an R3HA. As a first step to assess the synthetic potential of polyhydroxyalkanoate derived R3HAs, (R)-3-hydroxydecanoic acid was synthetically converted to (±)3-chlorodecanoic acid, which when conjugated to DP18L improved its antiproliferative activity against MiaPaCa cells.
Production of chiral R-3-hydroxyalkanoic acids and R-3-hydroxyalkanoic acid methylesters via hydrolytic degradation of polyhydroxyalkanoate synthesized by pseudomonads
A novel and efficient method for the production of enantiomericaly pure R-3-hydroxyalkanoic acids and R-3-hydroxyalkanoic acid methylesters was developed. The described method is based on hydrolysis of poly(hydroxyalkanoate) copolymers synthesized by Pseudomonas putida. The polymer was isolated via solvent recovery and hydrolyzed by acid methanolysis. The obtained 3-hydroxyalkanoic acid methylester mixture was distilled into several fractions with an overall yield of 96.6% (w/w). Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of the fractions showed that 3-hydroxyhexanoic-, 3-hydroxyoctanoic-, 3 hydroxydecanoic-, and 3-hydroxydodecanoic acid methylesters were enriched to purities exceeding 96 mol%, with distillation yields of 99.9, 99.8, 88.4, and 56.8% (w/w), respectively. Subsequent saponification of the purified methylester fractions yielded the corresponding 3-hydroxyalkanoic acids, which were recovered up to 92.8% (w/w). Chiral gas chromatography analysis confirmed that both 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid and 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid methylester are present in the R-form at a very high enantiomeric excess (>99.9%).
Functional characterization of an NADPH dependent 2-alkyl-3-ketoalkanoic acid reductase involved in olefin biosynthesis in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
OleD is shown to play a key reductive role in the generation of alkenes (olefins) from acyl thioesters in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. The gene coding for OleD clusters with three other genes, oleABC, and all appear to be transcribed in the same direction as an operon in various olefin producing bacteria. In this study, a series of substrates varying in chain length and stereochemistry were synthesized and used to elucidate the functional role and substrate specificity of OleD. We demonstrated that OleD, which is an NADP(H) dependent reductase, is a homodimer which catalyzes the reversible stereospecific reduction of 2-alkyl-3-ketoalkanoic acids. Maximal catalytic efficiency was observed with syn-2-decyl-3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid, with a k(cat)/K(m) 5- and 8-fold higher than for syn-2-octyl-3-hydroxydodecanoic acid and syn-2-hexyl-3-hydroxydecanoic acid, respectively. OleD activity was not observed with syn-2-butyl-3-hydroxyoctanoic acid and compounds lacking a 2-alkyl group such as 3-ketodecanoic and 3-hydroxydecanoic acids, suggesting the necessity of the 2-alkyl chain for enzyme recognition and catalysis. Using diastereomeric pairs of substrates and 4 enantiopure isomers of 2-hexyl-3-hydroxydecanoic acid of known stereochemistry, OleD was shown to have a marked stereochemical preference for the (2R,3S)-isomer. Finally, experiments involving OleA and OleD demonstrate the first 3 steps and stereochemical course in olefin formation from acyl thioesters; condensation to form a 2-alkyl-3-ketoacyl thioester, subsequent thioester hydrolysis, and ketone reduction.