10411-39-9Relevant articles and documents
Mapping the Binding Motifs of Deprotonated Monounsaturated Fatty Acids and Their Corresponding Methyl Esters within Supramolecular Capsules
Wang, Kaiya,Gibb, Bruce C.
, p. 4279 - 4288 (2017)
A suite of NMR techniques revealed that a cavitand (1) formed 2:1 host-guest complexes with a range of monounsaturated fatty carboxylates and their corresponding methyl esters. All of the carboxylates bound to the capsule in a J-shaped motif with the carboxylate at the equatorial region of the dimeric capsule, and the reverse turn of the chain and the methyl terminal in each polar region of the host. Guest exchange was slow on the NMR time scale, while tumbling was slow or close to the NMR time scale depending on the position and stereochemistry of the double bond. In contrast, the methyl esters were found to bind in three motifs depending on the position and stereochemistry of the double bond. Thus, the esters were observed to bind in a J-shaped, U-shaped (the turn in the guest occupying a polar region and the two termini competing for occupancy of the other pole), or a reverse J-shaped motif (ester moiety and turn each occupying a pole and the methyl terminal located near the equator). Relative binding constant (Krel) determinations revealed that the affinity for the capsule was dependent on the position and stereochemistry of the double bond.
A Facile and Efficient Method for the Synthesis of Labeled and Unlabeled Very Long Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids
Hamberg, Mats
, p. 489 - 494 (2021)
Several methods are available for elongation of fatty acid acyl chains. The present paper describes adaptation to the fatty acid field of a previously published protocol for manganese-based Wurtz type coupling of alkyl bromides. 22-Bromo-3(Z),6(Z),9(Z),12(Z),15(Z),18(Z)-docosahexaene, easily prepared from 4(Z),7(Z),10(Z),13(Z),16(Z),19(Z)-docosahexaenoic acid, was coupled to homologous ω-bromoesters by stirring for 4 hours at 40°C in the presence of manganese powder, a nickel catalyst and terpyridine. This afforded in yields of 70–75% a series of ω3-hexaenoates of chain lengths of 32–40 carbons. The corresponding fatty acids of >98% purity were obtained following saponification and final purification. By using methyl [2,2,3,3,4,4-2H6]10-bromodecanoate as coupling partner it was possible to prepare a very long chain fatty acid in isotopically labeled form, i.e., [2,2,3,3,4,4-2H6]14(Z),17(Z),20(Z),23(Z),26(Z),29(Z)-dotriacontahexaenoic acid. Also prepared were the monounsaturated long chain fatty acids 15(Z)-octadecenoic acid and 15(Z)-tetracosenoic acid. Very long chain fatty acids have been isolated from retina and other tissues and are of biological relevance. The methodology described will assist in further analytical and biological studies in this field.