Thompson et al. tested 68 common plant foods and found that flaxseed flour and its defatted meal produced the highest yield of END and ENL in vitro, up to 800 times higher than that from others [8]. Flaxseed is the dried seed of Linum usitatissimum 4EGI-1 nmr L., which is widely distributed in northern China, with an annual output of 420,000
tons (ranking fourth in the world). The important precursors of END and ENL synthesis include secoisolariciresinol diglucoside (SDG), secoisolariciresinol (SECO), matairesinol (MAT), lariciresinol (LCS) and pinoresinol (PRS) [9–11]. Among these precursors, SDG is the most abundant lignan in flaxseed, with a content of around 6.1-13.3 mg g-1 (dry matter) in whole flaxseeds, and 11.7-24.1 mg g-1 (dry matter) in the defatted flour [12]. Although de novo synthesis of END and ENL has been reported [13], the processes of synthesis are very complex and expensive, requiring more than ten major steps. More importantly, the reagents used in the reactions for the synthesis include LiAlH4, MeOH and several other chemicals, which are toxic and harmful to the environment. Therefore, biotransformation of precursors in plants to END or ENL is highly desirable. Biotransformation of SDG to END and ENL by human intestinal bacteria has been extensively studied, the pathway
consisting of glycoside Dinaciclib cell line hydrolysis, demethylation, and dehydroxylation selleck inhibitor of SDG and its intermediates [9]. Bacteria that can produce END and ENL on plant lignans under strictly anaerobic conditions have been isolated from human feces [14–23] (Fig. 1). However, sufficient yields for marketing scale production of END and ENL by these microbes have not been achieved, largely due to the difficulty to create
and maintain the strictly anaerobic culture conditions under which the bacteria can grow and conduct the biotransformation. Figure 1 Biotransformation pathway of END and ENL from plant-derived lignan SDG; bacteria that work at different steps of the pathway, along with the authors who reported them, are indicated. In China, flaxseeds are mainly used as oil crop. The defatted waste, though a rich source of lignans, selleckchem is mostly used as animal feed. To establish a method for producing enterolignans from defatted flaxseeds by bacterial biotransformation, we screened human fecal samples and obtained cultures that can efficiently produce END. After 49 rounds of selection by successive subcultures of human fecal bacterial microbiota in media containing defatted flaxseeds as the only carbon source, we obtained a group of mixed bacteria that could metabolize flaxseeds to produce END under both anaerobic and aerobic culture conditions. In this paper, we report the method and discuss its potential applications for large scale production of enterolignans.