Trans mycolic acid content is directly related to cell wall fluidity and permeability in mycobacteria. Carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy of mycolic acids isolated from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) and Mycobacterium smegmatis (MSM) fed 13 C-labeled precursor molecules was used to probe the biosynthetic pathways that modify mycolic acids. Heteronuclear correlation spectroscopy (HMQC) of ketomycolic acid from MTB allowed assignment of the complete 13 C-NMR spectrum. Incorporation patterns from [1- 13 C]-acetate and [2- 13 C]-acetate feeding experiments suggested that the mero chain and alpha branch of mycolic acids are both synthesized by standard fatty acid biosynthetic reactions. [ 13 C-methyl]-l-methionine was used to specifically label carbon atoms derived from the action of the methyl transferases involved in meromycolate modification. To enrich for trans mycolic acids a strain of MTB overexpressing the mma1 gene was labeled. Carbon-carbon coupling was observed in mycolate samples doubly labeled with 13 C-acetate and [ 13 C-methyl]-l-methionine and this information was used to assess positional specificity of methyl transfer. In MTB such methyl groups were found to occur exclusively on carbons derived from the 2 position of acetate, while in MSM they occurred only on carbons derived from the 1 position. These results suggest that the MSM methyltransferase MMAS-1 operates in an inverted manner to that of MTB.