Vereshchagin A G, Pchelkin V P
Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Botanicheskaya ul. 35, Moscow, 127276 Russia.
Bioorg Khim. 2003 Jan-Feb;29(1):83-90. doi: 10.1023/a:1022286604385.
Coordination complexes of unsaturated rac-1,2-diacylglycerols (DAGs) with silver ions were separated by adsorption and reversed-phase TLC (Ag-TLC and Ag-rpTLC, respectively). During the Ag-TLC, the silver ion complexes were shown to be formed by the DAG coordination centers of various structures and only on the adsorbent surface. Separation of the complexes proceeds according to the adsorption mechanism, and there is an inverse exponential functional relationship between the DAG mobility and their double bond number. Meanwhile, during the Ag-rpTLC, the Ag(+)-complexes are formed only with double bonds, only in solution, and at a 1:1 ratio. The complexes are fractionated by partitioning between two liquid phases, and the relationship between the mobility and unsaturation of these complexes is directly proportional. Nevertheless, despite all the differences between the two TLC methods, the polarity of DAGs with a bent configuration of their acyl chains greatly exceeds that of DAGs with the same unsaturation but with the acyl-chain conformation close to extended: it is two to three times greater in Ag-TLC and 30-40% greater in Ag-rpTLC. In addition, the relationship between the mobility and unsaturation of DAG complexes exhibits quantitative rather than qualitative differences in both versions of argentation TLC. Thus, under all conditions of argentation liquid chromatography, the mobility of complexes and, therefore, their polarity are determined not only by their composition (unsaturation), but also by the spatial structure (conformation) of their molecules.