Abstract

AbstractThe enantiomeric nature of the triglycerides of bovine milk fat was reinvestigated by determining the stereospecific distribution of fatty acids in rearranged butterfat, following partial hydrolysis with pancreatic lipase, and in certain molecular distillates of native butterfat, following Grignard degradation. The results with rearranged butterfat confirmed the validity of pancreatic lipase hydrolysis as a means of generating representative diglycerides from milk fat triglycerides. The Grignard degradation and lipolysis gave identical distributions for fatty acids when included as part of the assay system in the stereospecific analysis. Characteristically, butyric acid and the other short chain acids occupied the 3 position in the native butterfat, while in the rearranged oil they were distributed more or less randomly. Gas chromatographic analysis of the short chain glycerides on polyester columns allowed an effective resolution of butyryl, caproyl and caprylyl glycerides of identical numbers of total acyl carbons and double bonds. The method was especially well suited for resolution of the 2,3‐diglycerides, which were recovered either as the more polar fraction from thin layer chromatography of the X‐1,2‐diacylglycerols, or by acetolysis of the residual phenolphosphatides resulting from phospholipase A digestion. It was shown that butyric acid in the 3 position was preferentially paired with myristic, palmitic and oleic acid in the 2 position, and palmitic and oleic acid in the 1 position, which was also characteristic of the other short chain acids.

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