Journal of Lipid Research (Jul 2010)

The acylhalocapnines of halophilic bacteria: structural details of unusual sulfonate sphingoids

  • Maristella Baronio,
  • Veronica M.T. Lattanzio,
  • Natalie Vaisman,
  • Aharon Oren,
  • Angela Corcelli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 7
pp. 1878 – 1885

Abstract

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Sulfonate sphingoids or sulfonolipids are bioactive unusual compounds found in members of the Bacteroidetes family. The present report describes the structures of sulfonolipids of halophilic bacteria, sharing structural similarity with compounds of fungal origin inhibiting the serine palmitoyl transferase and with capnines, known as antagonists of von Willebrandt factor. Two sulfonolipids (SL1 and SL2) were isolated from the lipid extract of the halophile Salisaeta longa and analyzed by ESI-MS/MS. SL1 and SL2 structures have in common the long chain aminosulfonate 2-carboxy-2-amino-3,4-hydroxy-17 methyloctadec-5-ene-1-sulfonic for which the common name of halocapnine is suggested. The hydroxyl group on carbon 3 of aminosulfonate moiety is acylated: iso C15 and iso hydroxy C15 chains are present in SL1 and SL2, respectively. The levels of the two different sulfonolipids in the bacterium were found to be modulated by the proportion of sodium and magnesium ions in the environment.

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