Abstract
Cis-9-Octadecenoic acid-9,10-d2 and cis-9-octadecenoic acid-8,8,11,11-d4 and L-methionine-methyl-d3 were administered to cultures of Lactobacillus plantarum and converted by the organism to the corresponding cyclopropyl compounds. The 1st experiment showed that no scrambling or loss of label occurred when a methylene unit was added across the double bond of the labeled substrate. In the 2nd experiment, again, no loss or scrambling of label occurred, a result which ruled out any mechanism for biological cyclopropanation involving allylic activation of the double bond. The 3rd experiment yielded a biosynthetic cyclopropane fatty acid containing deuterium located exclusively at the methylene group of the cyclopropane ring. Up to 17% of a d1-species accompanied the major dideuterated compound. The lone deuterium in the d1-cyclopropane fatty acid occupies both positions of the methylene group to the same extent. The extent to which d1-cyclopropane fatty acid is produced increases with cell growth. The extent of exchange was similar in the cyclopropanation of both the 9,10- and 11,12-isomers of cis-octadecenoic acid.
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