A simple method to isolate fatty acids and fatty alcohols from wax esters in a wax-ester rich marine oil
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29932Date
2023-05-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Calanus finmarchicus is one of the most important zooplankton species in the North Atlantic.
The zooplankton is currently being harvested and industrially processed to a marine oil product for human consumption as a marine nutraceutical containing long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. This oil is very rich in wax esters, a lipid class where fatty acids are
esterified to long chain fatty alcohols. In this paper we describe a simple method to 1) isolate
the wax esters from the other lipid classes present in the oil, 2) hydrolyze the wax esters,
and 3) separate the fatty acids from the fatty alcohol, all by means of solid phase extraction.
Starting with an average of 322 mg Calanus oil, we obtained 75 mg fatty alcohols and 63 mg
fatty acids. Contrary to previously described techniques, our method neither oxidize the fatty
alcohols to fatty acids, nor are the fatty acids methylated, allowing the native, unesterified
fatty acids and fatty alcohols to be used for further studies, such as in cell culture experiments to study the metabolic effects of these specific lipid fractions rather than the intact oil
or wax esters.
Is part of
Schots, P.C. (2023). Calanus oil and its constituents as a therapeutic approach to target obesity-induced metabolic distortions. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31719.Publisher
PLOSCitation
Schots, Edvinsen, Olsen. A simple method to isolate fatty acids and fatty alcohols from wax esters in a wax-ester rich marine oil. PLOS ONE. 2023;18(5)Metadata
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