Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations

Abstract Volatile organic compounds emitted by different marine arctic strains of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides group were investigated by using a modified closed‐loop stripping apparatus (CLSA). Seven of nine strains emitted volatiles, dominated by methyl ketones, in specific patterns. T...

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Published in:Chemistry & Biodiversity
Main Authors: Dickschat, Jeroen S., Helmke, Elisabeth, Schulz, Stefan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200590014
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spelling crwiley:10.1002/cbdv.200590014 2024-09-09T19:23:33+00:00 Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations Dickschat, Jeroen S. Helmke, Elisabeth Schulz, Stefan 2005 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200590014 https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fcbdv.200590014 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/cbdv.200590014 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Chemistry & Biodiversity volume 2, issue 3, page 318-353 ISSN 1612-1872 1612-1880 journal-article 2005 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200590014 2024-07-11T04:34:36Z Abstract Volatile organic compounds emitted by different marine arctic strains of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides group were investigated by using a modified closed‐loop stripping apparatus (CLSA). Seven of nine strains emitted volatiles, dominated by methyl ketones, in specific patterns. The methyl ketones were aliphatic saturated, or unsaturated, and comprised 12 to 18 C‐atoms, sometimes with terminal Me branches. They were identified by GC/MS, retention‐index calculations, derivatization with dimethyl disulfide for CC bond location, and GC/FTIR to elucidate their uniform ( Z )‐configuration. The proposed structures of all methyl ketones were subsequently confirmed by synthesis, while the absolute configuration of chiral volatiles was elucidated by stereoselective synthesis. From retrobiosynthetic considerations, it was found that strain ARK10267 uses mainly valine, and strain ARK10063 mainly isoleucine for formation of starters for the ketone biosynthesis, which is correlated to fatty acid biosynthesis. Four strains (ARK10223, ARK10044, ARK10141, and ARK10146) use leucine. These separations are supported by phylogenetic affiliations based on 16S rRNA. Strain ARK10255b, in the course of this study found to be not a member of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides phylum, did not emit aliphatic ketones of medium chain length, but methionine‐derived 4‐(methylsulfanyl)butan‐2‐one and corresponding 4‐(methylsulfanyl)butan‐2‐ol. Most of the compounds described have not been reported previously from nature. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Wiley Online Library Arctic Chemistry & Biodiversity 2 3 318 353
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
description Abstract Volatile organic compounds emitted by different marine arctic strains of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides group were investigated by using a modified closed‐loop stripping apparatus (CLSA). Seven of nine strains emitted volatiles, dominated by methyl ketones, in specific patterns. The methyl ketones were aliphatic saturated, or unsaturated, and comprised 12 to 18 C‐atoms, sometimes with terminal Me branches. They were identified by GC/MS, retention‐index calculations, derivatization with dimethyl disulfide for CC bond location, and GC/FTIR to elucidate their uniform ( Z )‐configuration. The proposed structures of all methyl ketones were subsequently confirmed by synthesis, while the absolute configuration of chiral volatiles was elucidated by stereoselective synthesis. From retrobiosynthetic considerations, it was found that strain ARK10267 uses mainly valine, and strain ARK10063 mainly isoleucine for formation of starters for the ketone biosynthesis, which is correlated to fatty acid biosynthesis. Four strains (ARK10223, ARK10044, ARK10141, and ARK10146) use leucine. These separations are supported by phylogenetic affiliations based on 16S rRNA. Strain ARK10255b, in the course of this study found to be not a member of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides phylum, did not emit aliphatic ketones of medium chain length, but methionine‐derived 4‐(methylsulfanyl)butan‐2‐one and corresponding 4‐(methylsulfanyl)butan‐2‐ol. Most of the compounds described have not been reported previously from nature.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dickschat, Jeroen S.
Helmke, Elisabeth
Schulz, Stefan
spellingShingle Dickschat, Jeroen S.
Helmke, Elisabeth
Schulz, Stefan
Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
author_facet Dickschat, Jeroen S.
Helmke, Elisabeth
Schulz, Stefan
author_sort Dickschat, Jeroen S.
title Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
title_short Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
title_full Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
title_fullStr Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
title_full_unstemmed Volatile Organic Compounds from Arctic Bacteria of the Cytophaga‐Flavobacterium‐Bacteroides Group: A Retrobiosynthetic Approach in Chemotaxonomic Investigations
title_sort volatile organic compounds from arctic bacteria of the cytophaga‐flavobacterium‐bacteroides group: a retrobiosynthetic approach in chemotaxonomic investigations
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2005
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200590014
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fcbdv.200590014
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/cbdv.200590014
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op_source Chemistry & Biodiversity
volume 2, issue 3, page 318-353
ISSN 1612-1872 1612-1880
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200590014
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