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Details

Stereochemistry ACHIRAL
Molecular Formula C18H34O2
Molecular Weight 282.4614
Optical Activity NONE
Defined Stereocenters 0 / 0
E/Z Centers 1
Charge 0

SHOW SMILES / InChI
Structure of VACCENIC ACID

SMILES

CCCCCC\C=C\CCCCCCCCCC(O)=O

InChI

InChIKey=UWHZIFQPPBDJPM-BQYQJAHWSA-N
InChI=1S/C18H34O2/c1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18(19)20/h7-8H,2-6,9-17H2,1H3,(H,19,20)/b8-7+

HIDE SMILES / InChI

Molecular Formula C18H34O2
Molecular Weight 282.4614
Charge 0
Count
MOL RATIO 1 MOL RATIO (average)
Stereochemistry ACHIRAL
Additional Stereochemistry No
Defined Stereocenters 0 / 0
E/Z Centers 1
Optical Activity NONE

Description

Vaccenic acid (VA) (t11 octadecenoic acid) is a positional and geometric isomer of oleic acid (c9-octadecenoic acid), and is the predominant trans monoene in ruminant fats (50%–80% of total trans content). Dietary VA can be desaturated to cis-9,trans-11 conjugated linoleic acid (c9,t11-CLA) in ruminants, rodents, and humans. Hydrogenated plant oils are another source of VA in the diet, and it has been recently estimated that this source may contribute to about 13%–17% of total VA intake. In contrast to suggestions from the epidemiological studies, the majority of studies using cancer cell lines (Awad et al. 1995; Miller et al. 2003) or rodent tumors (Banni et al. 2001; Corl et al. 2003; Ip et al. 1999; Sauer et al. 2004) have demonstrated that VA reduces cell growth and (or) tumor metabolism. Animal and in vitro studies suggest that the anti-cancer properties of VA are due, in part, to the in vivo conversion of VA to c9,t11-CLA. However, several additional mechanisms for the anti-cancer effects of VA have been proposed, including changes in phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis, reduced proliferation, increased apoptosis, and inhibition of fatty acid uptake. In conclusion, although the epidemiological evidence of VA intake and cancer risk suggests a positive relationship, this is not supported by the few animal studies that have been performed. The majority of the studies suggest that any health benefit of VA may be conferred by in vivo mammalian conversion of VA to c9,t11-CLA. VA acts as a partial agonist to both peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR)-α and PPAR-γ in vitro, with similar affinity compared to commonly known PPAR agonists. Hypolipidemic and antihypertrophic bioactivity of VA is potentially mediated via PPAR-/-dependent pathways.

Originator

Approval Year

Targets

Primary TargetPharmacologyConditionPotency
4.99 µM [IC50]
31.8 µM [IC50]

Conditions

ConditionModalityTargetsHighest PhaseProduct
Primary
Unknown
Primary
Unknown
Primary
Unknown
Primary
Unknown

PubMed

Patents

Sample Use Guides

In Vivo Use Guide
In a double-blind, randomized, parallel-intervention study, healthy young men who consumed a Vaccenic acid (VA)-rich diet (3.6 g VA/day) for 5 weeks had 6% lower total-cholesterol and 9% lower HDL-cholesterol concentrations than men consuming a low VA diet.
Route of Administration: Oral
In Vitro Use Guide
Vaccenic acid (VA) at 30 and 100 uM concentrations suppressed cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in vitro in a PPAR-α- and PPAR-γ-dependent manner.
Substance Class Chemical
Record UNII
GQ72OGU4EV
Record Status Validated (UNII)
Record Version