4.2 Article

Bacterial Predators Possess Unique Membrane Lipid Structures

Journal

LIPIDS
Volume 46, Issue 12, Pages 1129-1140

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1007/s11745-011-3614-5

Keywords

Bdellovibrio-and-like-organisms; Phospholipids; Sphingolipids; Phosphonolipids; Mass spectrometry; Predatory prokaryotes; Cell wall

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [LI309/29-1]

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Bdellovibrio-and-like organisms (BALO) are a phylogenetically diverse group of predatory prokaryotes that consists of the two families Bdellovibrionaceae and Bacteriovoracaceae. We investigated the phospholipid composition of the three important BALO strains Bacteriovorax stolpii (DSM 12778), Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus HD100 (DSM 50701) and Peredibacter starrii (DSM 17039). We confirmed the presence of sphingophosphonolipids in B. stolpii, while we characterized sphingophosphonolipids with a 2-amino-3-phosphonopropanate head group for the first time. In B. bacteriovorus HD100 phosphatidylthreonines were found and, thus, B. bacteriovorus is the second prokaryote investigated so far possessing this rare lipid class. In the third analyzed organism, P. starrii, we observed phosphatidylethanolamine structures with an additional N-glutamyl residue, which form the first reported class of amino acid-containing phosphatidylethanolamines.

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