Popis: |
Certain phosphatidylglycerol-deficient mutants of Escherichia coli accumulate two fatty acylated monosaccharides related to lipid A biosynthesis that have been identified as 2,3-diacylglucosamine 1-phosphate (lipid X) and triacylglucosamine 1-phosphate (lipid Y) (Raetz, C. R. H. (1984) Rev. Infect. Dis. 6, 463-472). Lipid Y has the same structure as lipid X, except that it bears an additional palmitoyl moiety, esterified to the 3-OH of the N-linked R-3-hydroxymyristoyl residue. We now describe a membrane-associated system for the enzymatic conversion of lipid X to lipid Y. Removal of glycerophospholipids form such membranes by washing with cold ethanol abolishes the activity. The system can be reactivated by the addition of exogenous phospholipids dispersed as mixed micelles with Triton X-100. When reconstituted in this manner, the formation of lipid Y is strictly dependent upon a glycerophospholipid donor bearing a palmitoyl residue in the sn-1 position. The enzyme system does not utilize palmitoyl coenzyme A or palmitoyl acyl carrier protein. It does not catalyze efficient transfer of fatty acids differing from palmitate by only one carbon atom. In contrast, the enzyme has relatively little specificity for the polar headgroup of the phospholipid donor, and it also appears to utilize a disaccharide precursor of lipid A as an alternative palmitoyl acceptor. Since the in vitro synthesis of lipid Y proceeds with a high yield, we have isolated the product and verified its structure by 1H NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The transesterification reaction that converts lipid X to lipid Y may be a model for the enzymatic synthesis of other acyloxyacyl structures, known to occur in mature lipid A. |