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Odd numbered 1-alkenes, such as 1-pentadecene or 1,8,11,14-heptadecatetraene are formed from palmitic or linolenic acid by fragmentative decarboxylation. Incubation studies with germinating safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) and (2R,3R)-12-phenyl2,3-2H2dodecanoic acid, (2S,3S)-12-phenyl2,3-2H2dodecanoic acid, (2R)-12-phenyl2-2Hdodecanoic acid and (2S)-12-phenyl2-2Hdodecanoic acid instead of the natural alpha-linolenic acid precursor revealed the fragmentation to be an overall anti elimination of the 3-pro(S) hydrogen and the carboxyl group (anti-periplanar transition state geometry). Externally offered 3-hydroxy acids are not fragmented to 1-alkenes. The most probable mechanistic alternatives are in agreement with abstraction of the 3-pro(S) hydrogen as a radical followed by electron transfer and fragmentation, or transient insertion of oxygen into the 3-pro(S) C-H bond and subsequent fragmentation into an 1-alkene and CO2 after appropriate activation. The mechanism seems to be of general importance for the biosynthesis of vinylic substructures of natural products from oxygenated precursors.
Görgen et al. (Wed,) studied this question.