Mh. Choi et Sc. Yoon, POLYESTER BIOSYNTHESIS CHARACTERISTICS OF PSEUDOMONAS-CITRONELLOLIS GROWN ON VARIOUS CARBON-SOURCES, INCLUDING 3-METHYL-BRANCHED SUBSTRATES, Applied and environmental microbiology, 60(9), 1994, pp. 3245-3254
Forty-two different carbon sources were tested for the polyester synth
esis of a citronellol-utilizing bacterium, Pseudomonas citronellolis (
ATCC 13674). These included linear C-2 to C-10 monocarboxylic acids, C
-2 to C-10 dicarboxylic acids, saccharides, alpha,omega-diols, hydroca
rbons, and 3-methyl-branched substrates such as 3,7-dimethyl-6-octen-o
l (citronellol), 3-methyl-n-valerate, 3-methyl-1-butanol, and 3-methyl
adipate. Isolated polymers were characterized by gas chromatography, i
nfrared spectroscopy, H-1- or C-13-nuclear magnetic resonance spectros
copy, H-1-C-13 heteronuclear correlation spectroscopy (H-1-C-13 COSY),
H-1-H-1 homonuclear COSY, and differential scanning calorimetry. Poly
esters from nine monocarboxylic acids and two related carbon sources c
ould be metabolically divided into three groups. The first group of C-
2 to C-4 carbon sources resulted in copolyesters composed of 61 to 70
mol% 3-hydroxydecanoate, 23 to 33 mol% 3-hydroxyoctanoate, 3.6 to 9.0
mol% 3-hydroxy-5-cis-dodecenoate, and 1.8 to 2.6 mol% 3-hydroxy-7-cis-
tetradecenoate. Carbon sources in group II (C-7 to C-10) produced copo
lyesters composed of 3-hydroxyacid monomer units with the same number
of carbon atoms as the substrate (major constituent) and monomer units
with either two less or two more carbons. Negligible amounts of 3-hyd
roxy-5-cis-dodecenoate and 3-hydroxy-7-cis-tetradecenoate were detecte
d in copolyesters from this group. Copolyesters from group III (C-5 an
d C-6) had a monomer unit distribution that could be said to be betwee
n those of groups I and II. In addition, a novel copolyester, methyl-6
-octenoate-co-3-hydroxy-5-methylhexnoate), was synthesized when grown
on citronellol. The H-1-C-13 heteronuclear COSY spectrum for monomer u
nit II revealed that both methylene and isopropyl groups, proximately
connected in series to a single chiral center, had magnetically diaste
reotopic natures.