Abstract
Phospholipids are an essential constituent of cells with all life thought to produce phospholipids with either a glycerol or sphingoid moiety at their core. For the first time, we demonstrate that a thermophilic bacterium, Limisphaera ngatamarikiensis NGM72.4T, produces a third type of phospholipid – serinophospholipids – which are distinct from glycero- and sphingophospholipids by featuring a serinol backbone instead. We show that the major serinophospholipid metabolites are N,O-diacylserinophospho-N-methylethanolamine and N,O-diacylserinophosphoethanolamine, and that serinophospholipids constitute up to 38% of the phospholipid mass. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these metabolites are further differentiated from ‘traditional’ bacterial glycerophospholipids by their backbone stereochemistry. In contrast to bacterial glycerophospholipids, which have an sn-glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) architecture, the newly discovered serinophospholipids have an (S)-configured serinol core that is equivalent to the sn-glycerol-1-phosphate (G1P) arrangement characteristic of Archaea. This research expands the known diversity of phospholipids beyond the current two backbone paradigm and challenges our understanding of lipid evolution.
Supplementary materials
Title
Serinophospholipids: A third type of natural phospholipid discovered in a thermophilic bacterium - Supplementary Information
Description
Experimental procedures for the isolation and synthesis of reported compounds
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