Abstract

The growth of Acinetobacter species HO1-N on a homologous series of dialkyl ethers yielded characteristic cellular and extracellular ether fatty acids. Microbial growth on diheptyl ether resulted in the appearance of 7-n-heptoxy-1-n-heptanoic acid as a cellular fatty acid and 2-n-heptoxy-1-acetic acid as the sole extracellular fatty acid. The oxidation of dinonyl ether and didecyl ether by Acinetobacter resulted in the extracellular accumulation of 2-n-nonoxy-acetic acid and 2-n-decoxy-1-acetic acid, respectively. The 16-carbon ether fatty acid, 6-n-decoxy-1-n-hexanoic acid, was identified as a major cellular fatty acid in didecyl ether-grown cells. The extracellular ether fatty acids accumulated in an inverse relationship to the disappearance of the dialkyl ether and appeared to represent end products of metabolism. The carbon and energy required for cellular growth and metabolism resided in the terminal 5-carbons of diheptyl ether, 7-carbons of dinonyl ether and 8-carbons of didecyl ether. Glutarate, adipate, pimelate and suberate were identified from cells grown at the expense of diheptyl, dioctyl, dinonyl and didecyl ether, respectively, suggesting a role for dibasic acids as metabolic intermediates. A new and novel mechanism for the metabolism of symmetrical dialkyl ethers is suggested. Terminal methyl group oxidation of the dialkyl ether results in the formation of an alkoxy-fatty acid followed by an internal carbon-carbon scission reaction 2-carbons removed from the oxygen atom. The resulting endproducts are alkoxyacetic acid and the corresponding dibasic acid.

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