Aureobasidium pullulans, originally introduced as an inadvertent contaminant in solutions used for evaluating the stability of prostaglandins, proved to lead to the rapid disappearance of the cyclopentenone unit of PGA2 (as monitored by circular dichroic spectroscopy). The cyclopentenone unit is converted, in various metabolites, to a 9-keto, 9α or 9β-hydroxy group lacking the ring unsaturation. The major EtoAc-soluble 9-hydroxy metabolite (Compound-I) was shown to be 9α, 15α-dihydroxy-2,3,4,5-tetranor-13-trans-prostenoic acid. Similar tetranor 9-hydroxy metabolites with one additional degree of unsaturation, and with a 9β-hydroxy group, also occur but these have not been fully characterized. Only two of the wide range of 9-keto metabolites are fully characterized by mass spectral (MS) data: 9,15-oxo-2,3,4,5-tetranorprostanoic acid and 9,15-oxo-2,3,4,5-tetranor-13-trans-prostenoic acid. The water soluble metabolites have not been characterized further.The fully characterized metabolites together with MS data from mixtures of minor metabolites indicate that A. pullulans can perform the following transformations: β-oxidation, dehydrogenation at C-15, reduction of the enone carbon-carbon double bonds (both Δ10,11 and Δ13,14), reduction of the 9-ketone, and possibly migration of the cyclopentyl double bond (Δ10,11 → Δ11,12). A. pullulans metabolizes 15-epimeric PGA2 equally readily with the production of similar products. PGA1 affords less 9-keto metabolites with compound I constituting 33% of the product by HPLC analysis. A. pullulans displays some enantioselectivity, PGA2 and 15-epi-PGA2 are each metabolized more rapidly than their enantiomers. Other prostaglandins appear to be less readily metabolized.