Abstract

Synthetic cholesteryl 5-oxovalerate and 9-oxononanoate were used as reference standards for the isolation and identification of cholesteryl ester core aldehydes from tert-butyl hydroperoxide/Fe++ oxidation of synthetic and natural cholesteryl esters. The core aldehydes were recovered from the peroxidation products by thin-layer chromatography as the free aldehydes or the 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazones and were identified, respectively, by gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) and by GLC combined with mass spectrometry (GC/MS) or by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and by HPLC with MS (LC/MS). The core aldehydes produced by peroxidation of cholesteryl linoleate were identified as mainly 9-oxononanoates of cholesterol and oxycholesterols, with smaller amounts of the 8-oxooctenoates, 10-oxodecenoates, 11-oxoundecenoates and 12-oxododecenoates. Peroxidation of cholesteryl arachidonate yielded 5-oxovalerates of cholesterol and the oxycholesterols as the main products with smaller amounts of the 4-oxobutyrates, 6-oxohexenoates, 7-oxoheptenoates, 8-oxooctenoates, 9-oxononenoates, 9-oxononadienoates and 10-oxodecadienotes. The oxycholesterols resulting from the peroxidation of the steroid ring were identified as mainly 7-keto-, 7 alpha-hydroxy- and 7 beta-hydroxy-cholesterols and 5 alpha,6 alpha- and 5 beta,6 beta-epoxy-cholestanols. Cholesteryl palmitate and oleate did not yield core aldehydes in the present peroxidation system. In these esters, the sterol and linoleic acid moieties appeared to be oxygenated at about the same rate, while the arachidonic acid moiety reacted more rapidly than did the sterol moiety.

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