Abstract
A key intermediate in the biosynthetic pathway by which C24 bile acids are formed from cholesterol has long been considered to be varanic acid, (24ξ,25ξ)-3α,7α,12α-24-tetrahydroxy-5β-cholestan-27-oic acid. The (24R,25R)-epimer of this tetrahydroxy bile acid, in the form of its taurine N-acyl amidate, was thought to be the major biliary bile acid in lizards of the family Varanidae. We report here that a major biliary bile acid of three lizard species – the Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis), Gray’s monitor (Varanus olivaceus), and the Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) – is a novel epimer of varanic acid. The epimer was shown to be (24R,25S)-3α,7α,12α,24-tetrahydroxy-5β-cholestan-27-oic acid (present in bile as its taurine conjugate). The structure was established by mass spectroscopy and by 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic spectroscopy, as well as by synthesis of the compound.
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