Abstract
The unsaturated lipids produced by human gut bacteria exhibit extraordinary structural diversity, largely attributed to the isomerism of the carbon-carbon double bond (C=C) in terms of position and stereochemistry. Characterizing these distinct C=C configurations poses a significant challenge in the research field, primarily due to limitations in current bioanalytical methodologies. In this study, we developed a novel structural lipidomic workflow by integrating an epoxidation protocol using meta-chloroperoxybenzoic acid for C=C derivatization and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry for C=C characterization. We utilized this workflow to quantitatively assess over 50 C=C positional and cis/trans isomers of fatty acids and phospholipids from selected human gut bacteria. The strain-specific isomer profiles revealed unexpected and remarkable productivity of trans-10-octadecenoic acid by Enterococcus faecalis, Bifidobacterium longum, and Lacto-bacillus acidophilus, among numerous other trans fatty acid isomers produced by gut bacteria. Isotope-tracking experiments suggest that gut bacteria produce trans-10-octadecenoic acid through isomeric biotransformation of oleic acid in vitro and that such isomeric biotransformation of dietary oleic acid is dependent on the presence of gut bacteria in vivo.
Supplementary materials
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Supplementary table
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The gut bacteria and the medium used in the experiments. Raw data of experiments.
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