Perhaps this will help- these people used mass spectrometry to identify the 
lipid. The expression system was E. coli and the lipid was 18-carbon 
cis-vaccenic acid.

Detection and removal of an artefact fatty acid from the binding site of 
recombinant Bombyx mori pheromone-binding protein.
Oldham NJ, Krieger J, Breer H, Svatos A.
Chem Senses. 2001 Jun;26(5):529-31.


Uma.
--
Uma Katre
Columbus, IN 47201


________________________________
 From: Andre Luis Berteli Ambrosio <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, October 3, 2013 8:42 AM
Subject: [ccp4bb] Identity of a Bacterial lipid
 


Dear colleagues,
We have just determined the crystal structure (at 1.1 A max resolution) of a 
recombinant protein that crystallized in complex with a leftover bacterial 
lipid, the full identity of which we are currently struggling to identify. 
Please see attached (3 views of the molecule).
The map strongly suggests an 18-carbon long polyunsaturated fatty acid, with 5 
conjugated unsaturations (at positions 5, 7, 9, 11 and 13, all cis), covalently 
bound to some extra chemical group at is polar head. This extra group seems to 
be comprised of 4 (5?) atoms, though I am afraid cannot tell if it extends 
further into not-so-well-structured atoms. 
Myself and a student have spent the last two days searching on the web for 
possible matches for this ligand without any success. For instance, we have 
generated a SMILES formula for the aliphatic tail comprising the unsaturations 
and browsed for similar compounds at PubChem with different similarity cutoffs, 
but nothing seemed to resemble the complete molecule.
We would appreciate if you could make any comments on the nature of this ligand 
or perhaps suggest your favorite computational tools. We will perform mass spec 
on it soon.
Thank you beforehand.
                Andre LB Ambrosio, DSc
Laboratório Nacional de Biociências - LNBio
                        CNPEM, Brazil 

Reply via email to