Macrocyclic oxygen transfer in conversion of fatty acid hydroperoxide to a single species of triol in physiological saline

Abstract

We analyzed the autoxidation and non-enzymic reactions of the 17S-hydroperoxide of docosahexaenoic acid 1, a common lipoxygenase product in mammalian cells and with its six double bonds presenting opportunities for reactions not available to all polyunsaturated fatty acids. Incubations in phosphate-buffered saline for one or more days at 37 °C revealed a dominant product identified by comparison to synthetic standard as diastereomers of the γ-lactone 2 of 4,5,17-trihydroxydocosapentaenoic acid. Over several days in PBS at 37 °C the γ-lactone hydrolyzed to the more polar 4,5,17-trihydroxy derivative 3. The same γ-lactone is formed by acid hydrolysis of synthetic 4,5-cis-epoxy-17-hydroxy-22:5ω3 4, but this epoxide is stable in PBS at pH 7.4, indicating the γ-lactone is a primary product and not secondary to hydrolysis of the 4,5-epoxide. Mass spectrometric analysis of γ-lactone and trihydroxy derivatives from incubation with [17-18O2H]-hydroperoxide demonstrated intramolecular oxygen transfer with retention of both hydroperoxy oxygens on the 5- and 17-carbons. Direct involvement of the 17-hydroperoxide group in the oxygen transfer with participation of the C1 carboxyl in the mechanism with high "effective molarity" at the 4,5-double bond can account for the findings. Other fatty acid hydroperoxides with similar spatial relationship of peroxide to the double bonds could also undergo this intramolecular oxygen transfer, a novel pathway in lipid peroxidation.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Mar 2026
Accepted
27 Mar 2026
First published
02 Apr 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Macrocyclic oxygen transfer in conversion of fatty acid hydroperoxide to a single species of triol in physiological saline

M. S. Choi, W. E. Boeglin, D. Stec, M. W. Calcutt, N. A. Porter and A. R. Brash, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6OB00371K

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