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1 Department of Animal and Veterinary Sciences and
2 Department of Plant Pathology and Physiology, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634
Corresponding author: T. C. Jenkins; e-mail: TJNKNS{at}clemson.edu.
In a previous in vitro study, mixed ruminal microorganisms converted oleic acid to a variety of trans monenes when grown in batch cultures under constant environmental conditions. To determine whether a similar conversion occurs under environmental conditions more typical of the rumen, conversion of 13C-labeled oleic acid to biohydrogenation intermediates was determined in ruminal microorganisms grown in continuous culture at two pH (5.5 and 6.5) and liquid dilution rates (0.05 and 0.10/h) arranged factorially. After each morning feeding of the dual-flow continuous cultures, 250 mg of oleic acid in 5 mL of ethanol were injected into each culture. On d 10, 250 mg of oleic-1-13C replaced the unlabelled oleic acid in ethanol. Trans fatty acids were isolated from culture samples by solid phase extraction, and 13C enrichment and identity of double bond position was determined by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy. At pH 6.5 and 0.10/h dilution rate, 13C enrichment was detected in all trans-C18:1 isomers having double bond positions from C6 through C16 in the acyl chain. However, when pH or dilution rate in fermentors was lowered, no 13C enrichment was detected in any trans isomer with a double bond position beyond C10. Enrichment in stearic acid increased by reducing culture pH from 6.5 to 5.5, but decreased when dilution rate dropped from 0.10 to 0.05/h. The stearic acid carbons that originated from oleic acid biohydrogenation increased from 30 to 72% when pH dropped from 6.5 to 5.5. The 13C enrichment of trans-10 was reduced under low pH and dilution rate conditions. The results of this study confirm that ruminal microorganisms are capable of converting oleic acid to a wide variety of trans-C18:1 positional isomers when ruminal conditions are favorable (such as the pH 6.5 and 0.10/h dilution rate treatment). However, at low pH and dilution rate, the conversion of oleic acid to trans-C18:1 still occurs, but positional isomers produced are restricted to double bond positions from C6 to C10. Low pH conditions also increased the conversion of oleic acid to stearic acid.
Key Words: biohydrogenation oleic acid pH dilution rate
Abbreviation key: APE = atom percent excess, CLA = conjugated linoleic acid, DMDS = dimethyl disulfide, FAME = fatty acid methyl ester, GC-MS = gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy.
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