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University of Groningen Stereoselective synthesis of glycerol-based lipids Fodran, Peter IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if you wish to cite from it. Please check the document version below. Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Publication date: 2015 Link to publication in University of Groningen/UMCG research database Citation for published version (APA): Fodran, P. (2015). Stereoselective synthesis of glycerol-based lipids [S.l.]: [S.n.] Copyright Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Take-down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Downloaded from the University of Groningen/UMCG research database (Pure): http://www.rug.nl/research/portal. For technical reasons the number of authors shown on this cover page is limited to 10 maximum. Download date: 14-06-2017 Chapter 1 An Introduction to Phospholipids Abstract: Phospholipids are compounds with enormous significance for Life. For a long time, they were considered as passive building blocks of the membranes. However with the discovery of the phospholipid signalling, understanding of their roles changed. In the first part, this chapter introduces the reader to the nomenclature of phospholipids. The second part of this chapter briefly summarizes the biosynthetic pathways of various phospholipid classes and presents some of their functions in living organisms. The last part of this chapter presents an outline of this thesis. 1 Chapter 1 Introduction 1 “Lipids” is a loosely defined term for substances of biological origin, soluble in non-polar solvents.1 Chemically, lipids can be divided into non-saponifiable and saponifiable lipids. Steroids, prostaglandins and fat soluble vitamins comprise the class of non-saponifiable lipids. Glycerolipids, phospholipids, sphingolipids and waxes constitute the class of saponifiable lipids. An intriguing difference between these classes is that while non-saponifiable lipids act mostly as single molecules, saponifiable lipids mainly act as a collective. This can be illustrated by the following examples. Retinal (vitamin A) is a non-saponifiable lipid. Its molecular properties allow light-induced cis/trans isomerization which is essential for vision (Figure 1-I). Figure 1. ( I ) Cis/trans isomerization as a principle of vision; ( II ) organization of a lipid raft in a liquid ordered membrane; ( III ) examples of a saponifiable lipids which act as single molecules. 2 An Introduction to Phospholipids A mixture of saturated phospholipids, cholesterol and sphingolipids is a collective (Figure 1-II) in the liquid ordered phase. In the membrane this collective forms an organized lipid raft2 which is essential for signal transduction.3 As this classification to saponifiable and non-saponifiable lipids is historical, it is easy to find exceptions. For example, lipid 1 (Figure 1-III) is a typical membrane lipid surrounded by billions of similar lipids (slightly) differing in the length of the fatty acids and the number of the double bonds. However, in the entire collective of the membrane lipids, 1 is also the lipid involved in inflammation processes.4 An example of a non-saponifiable lipid fulfilling the role of a saponifiable lipid is the archaeal membrane lipid 2. The ether bonds make 2 resistant to saponification, but the function which 2 fulfils is typical for saponifiable lipids. The main challenge in the studies of saponifiable lipids is their variability. Terms like glycero-, phospho- and spingolipids frequently account for 10s to 1000s related, but different molecular species. This variability is determined by the modular structure of these lipids, described in Figure 2. In Nature, 40 common fatty acids occur which differ in their chain length and the degree of unsaturation (Figure 2-I). Triacylglycerols (Figure 2-II) are esters of glycerol and fatty acids. Given that the 3 hydroxyl groups can be esterified with any of the 40 fatty acids, the estimated number of possible triacylglycerols approaches 64 000 (403). In the case of glycerophospholipids (Figure 2-II), one position of the glycerol is already occupied by any of the 6 common phosphorus headgroups. The remaining 2 positions can again be esterified by any of the 40 fatty acids resulting in up to 9 600 (6 x 402) different species. Spingolipids can display even greater variability (Figure 2-III). The primary hydroxyl group can carry either a phosphorous headgroup or a glycan core resulting in more than 100 000 different species. The current knowledge of lipids is far away from understanding the biological significance of this variability, but it has been established that subtle deviations in the fatty acid composition of lipids can be linked to heart5 and neurodegenerative diseases6 or metabolic syndrome.7 This chapter briefly introduces 3 topics that are important for this thesis. In the first part, the reader is introduced to the nomenclature of the lipids. The second part offers a brief overview of the biosynthesis of fatty acids, triacylglycerols and phospholipids together with some of their biological properties. The last part of the chapter presents the outline of this thesis. 3 1 Chapter 1 1 Figure 2. Variability of saponifiable lipids. ( I ) 40 common fatty acids; ( II ) variability in glycerol based lipids; ( III ) variability in sphingolipids. Nomenclature Lipid research covers multiple fields of chemistry, biology and medicine. Therefore it is not a surprise that a unified and universally applied nomenclature is lacking. Despite the nomenclature for organic compounds is rigorously defined by IUPAC8, this is happily ignored in lipid research. The following table (Table 1) 4 An Introduction to Phospholipids summarizes all the fatty acids that are mentioned in this thesis in all the common nomenclatures. Table 1. Names and symbols for fatty acids in this thesis. Numerical symbol 4:0 6:0 8:0 10:0 12:0 14:0 16:0 18:0 18:1(11) 18:2(9,12) Structure Systematic name Trivial name H3C-(hydrocarbon)-CO2H -(CH2)2-(CH2)4-(CH2)6-(CH2)8-(CH2)10-(CH2)12-(CH2)14-(CH2)16-(CH2)7-CH=CH-(CH2)9-(CH2)5-(CH2CH=CH)2-(CH2)7- (acid) butanoic hexanoic octanoic decanoic dodecanoic tetradecanoic hexadecanoic octadecanoic Z-9-octadecenoic Z,Z-octadeca-9,12dienoic Z,Z,Z,Z-eicosa5,8,11,14-tetraenoic (acid) butyric caproic caprylic capric lauric myristic palmitic stearic oleic linoleic 20:4(5,8,11,14) -(CH2)4-(CH2CH=CH)4-(CH2)3 arachidonic The description of the stereochemistry of the glycerol-based lipids might be confusing. Given that glycerol is a prochiral compound, its substitution can lead to a pair of enantiomers. Chemically, these are easily described using the Cahn-IngoldPrelog system (CIP). Although unambiguous, this nomenclature can obscure biosynthetic relationships, for example in the case of triacylglycerols. Triacylglycerols are biosynthesized by acylation of a diacylglycerol (Figure 3). An example below (Figure 3-I) shows that depending on the length of the introduced fatty acid, the corresponding triacylglycerols might have opposite configurational prefixes in CIP system. In order to clearly present biological relationships, Hirschmann9 introduced a stereospecific numbering (sn) system. This is based on the Fischer projection of the substituted glycerol, placed in such a way that the secondary hydroxyl group points to the left. The carbon on top is then designated as the sn-1 position and carbon on the bottom sn-3. The advantage of the Hirschmann system is that a formal inversion of the configuration is not possible. For comparison, the acylation of diacylglycerol that was confusing in CIP (Figure 3-I) is now defined as an acylation on the sn-3 position (Figure 3-II). 5 1 Chapter 1 1 Figure 3. Comparison of 2 different systems for the stereochemical description of glycerol-based lipids. ( I ) the CIP system commonly used in organic chemistry; ( II ) Hirschmanns system used in biology and biochemistry. Biosynthesis of fatty acids, sphingolipids, triacylglycerols, and glycerophospholipids Biosynthesis of fatty acids Fatty acids are the building blocks of lipids. Their de novo synthesis is one of the key metabolic pathways in living organisms. Chemically, this process is a decarboxylative malonic ester synthesis of acyl coenzyme A with malonyl coenzyme A (6) (Figure 4) followed by a deoxygenation. The synthesis of fatty acids starts with a covalent attachment of acetyl coenzyme A 3 to the acyl carrying protein (ACP). Malonyl coenzyme A (6) enters the cycle after covalent attachment to the acyl carrier protein (ACP). The condensation of 4 and 6 results in thioaceto acetate 7 and liberation of CO2. 6 An Introduction to Phospholipids 1 Figure 4. De novo biosynthesis of fatty acids. The ß-keto group is first reduced to alcohol 8 by NADPH/H+ (Figure 4), which is subsequently dehydrated to α,ß-unsaturated 9. The conjugated double bond of 9 is reduced by NADPH/H+ and the resulting 10 can enter the second cycle. Alternatively, 10 (or its higher homologue) can either be hydrolysed to the corresponding fatty acid 11 or transthioesterified to acyl coenzyme A 12. All steps in the fatty acid synthesis are catalyzed by a fatty acid synthase (FAS). In Nature, there are 2 types of FAS. FAS type 1 is present in animals and fungi and FAS type 2 is found in bacteria and plants. The difference between the 2 types is that FAS type 1 is a single enzyme with 7 distinct domains and FAS type 2 is an assembly of 7 separable enzymes. A notable exception is the CMN group of bacterial species (Corynebacterium, Mycobacterium, and Nocardia), which possesses both types of FAS.10 Desaturation of fatty acids The fatty acid synthases tightly cooperate with desaturases that introduce double bonds in the fatty acid chain. The most common desaturation is the conversion of stearic acid to oleic acid by abstraction of 9-pro-R and 10-pro-R 7 Chapter 1 1 hydrogens. In human metabolism, this is catalyzed by 3 membrane-bound proteins (Figure 5). The necessary electrons come from the electron transport chain, which begins by reduction of reductase bound FAD (E-FAD) by NADH. Figure 5. Δ9 desaturation of fatty acids. The electrons are further transferred to cytochrome b5 and finally to the non-heme Fe of the desaturase. Iron in its Fe2+ state can interact with O2 and oxidize 13 to 14. The resulting oleoyl coenzyme A (14) can be further elongated or desaturated.11,12 Once the fatty acid has the desired length and unsaturation(s), it can enter other metabolic pathways. This can be, for example, further modification of the fatty acid (i.e. methylation as in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, see Chapter 2) or conversion into sphingolipids, triacylglycerols and glycerophospholipids. Biosynthesis of sphingolipids The biosynthesis of fatty acids is tightly connected to the biosynthesis of sphingolipids (derivatives of sphingosine (21)) via palmitoyl coenzyme A (15). The biosynthesis of 21 (Figure 6) starts with a decarboxylative condensation of 15 and serine (16). 8 An Introduction to Phospholipids 1 Figure 6. Biosynthesis of sphingosine. The resulting 17 is reduced to aminoalcohol 18. The nitrogen reacts with a fatty acid coenzyme A and 19 is desaturated resulting in ceramide 20, which after hydrolysis of the amide affords 21. Sphingosine (21) can be further modified (Figure 7) to sphinholipids like cerebrosides 22, sphingomyelines 23 or gangliosides 24. Figure 7. Examples of sphingolipids. 9 Chapter 1 1 Sphingolipids are responsible for diverse physiological functions. As the membrane building blocks they are located at the outer leaflet of the phospholipid bilayer.13 As signalling molecules14 sphingolipids are an important link between overproduction of lipids and obesity.15 Biosynthesis of triacylglycerols and glycerophospholipids The biosynthesis of triacylglycerols and glycerophospholipids is closely related. Both pathways start with (R)-glycerol-1-phosphate (sn-glycerol-3-phosphate) and share the same intermediates until the phosphatidic acid stage where the pathways divide. First the biosynthesis of triacylglycerols is discussed. Biosynthesis of triacylglycerols The dominant route producing more than 90%16,17,18 of the triacylglycerols is called the Kennedy pathway.19 In the endoplasmic reticulum, (R)-glycerol-1phosphate (sn-glycerol-3-phosphate) 25 (Figure 8) is esterified with a fatty acid coenzyme A to form lysophosphatidic acid 26. In the next step, 27 is esterified with a second fatty acid coenzyme A. Figure 8. The Kennedy pathway. The phosphate in the phosphatidic acid 27 is hydrolysed and the resulting diacylglycerol 28 is esterified with a third fatty acid coenzyme A to afford the 10 An Introduction to Phospholipids triacylglycerol 29. Subsequently, triacylglycerols can be stored in a specialized organelle (a lipid droplet20) where they serve as energy reserve and precursors of other lipid products. Figure 9. ( I ) accumulation of triacylglycerols and fatty acids between the membrane leaflets; ( II ) budding of a lipid droplet; ( III ) mature lipid droplet. The mechanism of formation of the lipid droplets is poorly understood, but a generally accepted theory states that these are formed by budding of the endoplasmic reticulum (Figure 9)21 as a response to an elevated triacylglycerol synthesis.22 Initially, the synthetized triacylglycerols concentrate between the leaflets of the membrane (Figure 9-I). With the increasing amount of triacylglycerols, the bud grows collecting more and more triacylglycerols (Figure 9-II). Finally, the lipid droplet forms (Figure 9-III) as an independent organelle that can move into the cytosol and interact with other organelles. Alternative mechanisms for the formation of lipid droplets have been proposed by Ploegh23 and Walter and Farase.24 The content of the lipid droplets can be utilized when needed. The main mechanism of utilization of the stored triacylglycerols and sterol esters is lipolysis. Adipose triglyceride lipase and hormone sensitive lipase are moved to the surface of the lipid droplet. The first enzyme hydrolyses at the sn-2 position of the triacylglycerol. Hormone sensitive lipase further hydrolyses the 1,3-diacylglycerol to a monoacylglycerol. The hydrolysis of the final fatty acid occurs in the cytosol and is catalyzed by a monoacylglycerol lipase.25 The products of the hydrolysis of triacylglycerols from the lipid droplets might be utilized for example in the biosynthesis of phospholipids. 11 1 Chapter 1 1 As it was already mentioned, the biosynthesis of phospholipids is closely related to the biosynthesis of triacylglycerols. The phosphatidic acid can be converted to any of the 6 common phospholipids by 2 mechanisms. The first mechanism involves cytidine triphosphate (CTP) activation of the phosphatidic acid leading to phosphatidylinositols (PI), phosphatidylglycerols (PG) and cardiolipins. The second mechanism utilizes CTP activation of the headgroup precursors leading to phosphatidylcholines (PC), phosphatidylethanolamines (PE) and phosphatidylserines (PS). The biosyntheses are presented in this order. The activation of phosphatidic acid 27 (Figure 10) by CTP results in the cytidine diphosphate (CDP) activated diacylglycerol 30 and liberation of diphosphate (PPi) CDP activated 30 can react with inositol (31) resulting in phosphatidylinositol 32 and cytidine monophosphate (CMP). Figure 10. Biosynthesis of phospholipids via CTP activation of 27. 12 An Introduction to Phospholipids Alternatively, the CDP activated 30 (Figure 10) can react with 25, which after hydrolysis of phosphate results in phosphatidylglycerol 34 type lipid. 34 can react with an additional molecule of CDP-diacylglycerol, affording cardiolipin 35.26 The phosphatidyl inositol 32, phosphatidyl glycerol 34 and cardiolipin 35 families of lipids fulfil various important functions in the entire cellular life. For example the PI lipids anchor membrane proteins to the outer leaflet of the membrane (via protein lipidation, see chapter 6). Another important role of the PI lipids is in signal transduction in the plant and the animal kingdom via the action of a specific phospholipase C.27 By this mechanism, the PI lipids influence the activity of dozens of enzymes belonging to the protein kinase C family, thus controlling key cellular functions like differentiation, proliferation, metabolism and apoptosis. The PG lipids serve as precursors for the cardiolipins. Cardiolipins are mainly found in the mitochondrial membrane, where they bind and regulate the activity of various proteins.28 Abnormalities in the cardiolipin metabolism can be linked to a variety of diseases, including Barth syndrome29, Parkinson, Alzheimer30 and Tengier disease.31 The mentioned functions of the families of lipids (PI, PG and cardiolipins) form only a fraction of what has been reported. The phosphatidic acid 27 can be transformed into PC, PE and PS phospholipids via the second mechanism involving activation of the headgroup precursor by CTP. This pathway starts with hydrolysis of 27 to diacylglycerol 28 (Figure 11-I). The CDP-phosphorylating agents 38 and 39 are synthetized in the cytosol by the same mechanism (Figure 11-II). The corresponding alcohols 36 are phosphorylated with ATP resulting in phosphates 37. These react with CTP leading to the phosphorylating agents 38 and 39, which are further transported to the endoplasmic reticulum, where they phosphorylate diacylglycerol 28. Phosphorylation of 28 with CDP-ethanolamine 38 results in phosphatidylethanolamine type lipid 40 and phosphorylation of 27 with 39 results in phosphatidylcholine lipid type 41. Both 40 and 41 can be further converted to phosphatidylserine 42 type lipids. And finally, 42 can be converted back to 40 by decarboxylation. PC, PE and PS lipids are the main building blocks of biological membranes. PC is the most common lipid in animals and plants where it constitutes up to 50% of all phospholipids. In bacteria, PC lipids are scarcer. Due to their molecular shape, PC, PE and PS lipids have their preferred location in the membranes. PC lipids are mainly located in the outer leaflet while PE and PS are located in the inner leaflet. Distribution of the lipids between the leaflets is tightly regulated by enzymes – flippases. However, in some events the distribution of the membrane lipids is altered. 13 1 Chapter 1 1 For example during apoptosis, PS lipids are moved to the outer leaflet, where they are recognized by macrophages. By this mechanism the apoptic cell is removed without triggering an inflamation.32 Figure 11. ( I ) Biosynthesis of phospholipids via CTP activation of the headgroup precursors; ( II ) biosynthesis of the CDP activated headgroup precursors 38 and 39. 14 An Introduction to Phospholipids Biosynthesis of non-archaeal ether based lipids 1 Plasmologens are ether analogues of the PE and PC lipids. Despite being structurally related, their biosynthesis requires a specific pathway (Figure 12-I). Figure 12. ( I ) Biosynthesis of plasmalogens; ( II ) mechanism of the substitution of acyl for a long chain alcohol as the key step in the biosynthesis of plasmalogens. 15 Chapter 1 1 The biosynthesis starts in the peroxisome, by acylation of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (43). In the second step the carboxylate is substituted by a long-chain alcohol resulting in 45. The mechanism of this step was elucidated by Brown and Snyder (Figure 12-II)33. In the active site of the alkylglycerone phosphate synthase, 44 tautomerizes to 46, which after protonation leads to 47. The resulting carbocation is attacked by a nucleophilic centre Nu of the protein (probably an amino group in the active site) resulting in departure of the carboxylate. In a subsequent step 49 reacts with a long-chain alcohol. 50 undergoes an E1 type elimination leading to 51 which finally tautomerizes to ketone 45. Reduction of 45 (Figure 12-I) results in 53 which is acylated in the endoplasmic reticulum. From 57 on, the biosynthesis is similar to the synthesis of PC or PE lipids. First the phosphate is hydrolyzed and resulting 55 is phosphorylated by CDP activated choline or ethanolamine. In case of the choline headgroup, the biosynthesis stops at this point. The lipids with ethanolamine headgroup can be further desaturated to 58. The biological functions of plasmalogens are still not fully understood. Structurally, they help to maintain physical properties of the membranes.34 Broniec et al.35 reported that the analogues of 56 act as scavengers of reactive oxygen suggesting that they play a role in oxidative stress. An important plasmalogen is the platelet activating factor (Figure 12-I), which is an extremely potent signalling molecule triggering the platelet aggregation and immunological responses at pM concentrations (10-11 M).36 An efficient synthesis of PAF is described in Chapter 3. Outline of this thesis Lipids play vital roles in many processes essential for life. This is illustrated by a lipid membrane, which is a complex mixture of (phospho)lipids with various chain lengths and degree of unsaturation. In this complex mixture, every single component has an irreplaceable role. Of course, lipids are in principle accessible from their natural sources, but their isolation and purification (from other lipids) is tedious and often virtually impossible. A convincing example in this connection starts with the impressive contribution of R. J. Anderson in 1927,37 who was the first to isolate and describe tuberculostearic acid 59. For his studies, he needed 2 200 culture flasks with a volume of 200 cm3. Only in 2010, 83 years later, it was established beyond reasonable doubt that 59 is part of phospholipid 60 in M. tuberculosis.38 From 1 g of a total lipid extract of M. tuberculosis, the authors isolated 50 μg of pure lipid 60, and determined its structure by independent synthesis. For further illustration, 1 g of the total lipid extract corresponds roughly to 20 g of bacteria. 16 An Introduction to Phospholipids Biology has a lot to gain from the availability of pure, well-defined, natural and unnatural lipids in sufficient amounts, and organic chemistry can fulfil this need. This is realized and illustrated in this thesis. In 7 chapters, novel, efficient, and stereoselective approaches are described for the synthesis of ester-based and etherbased phospholipids and triacylglycerols. Chapter 2 describes the catalytic asymmetric synthesis of methyl-branched fatty acids (59 in Figure 13). The approach is based on conjugate addition of methylmagnesium bromide to α,ß-unsaturated thioesters and subsequent chain elongation to the desired length by Wittig reaction with a functionalized ylide. This modular approach is applied in the synthesis of the fatty acid chain of caspofungin, which allowed a study in the group of Prof. R. M. J. Liskamp (Molecular Medicinal Chemistry, University of Utrecht) on the influence of the stereochemistry of this fatty acid on its antifungal properties. Figure 13. Examples of a fatty acid and lipid isolated from natural sources. The theme of Chapter 3 is the transformation of fatty acids into phospholipids. Here, the Jacobsen Co(II) salen complexes play an important role, granting the regiospecific opening of protected glycidol with fatty acids. The chapter further describes a migration-free deprotection of the resulting silylated diacylglycerols, solving a long-standing problem in this field. It allows the synthesis of various glycerophospholipids. A small modification of the catalyst opens a convenient access to mixed ether/ester lipids represented by platelet activating factor. Chapter 4 is an extension of this methodology to the synthesis of enantiopure triacylglycerols in just 3 synthetic steps. This allows the preparation of a small (>15) 17 1 Chapter 1 1 library of triacylglycerols, as a prelude to the determination of the composition of (cow) milk fat, a piece de resistance in diary research. Chapter 5 describes the influence of phospholipids on the function of mechanosensitive channels of large conductance (MscL). In particular, the role of methyl-branched lipid 60 on the MscL from the same species is studied and related to their non-branched analogues. Chapter 6 describes the synthesis of a fatty acid equipped with a strained cyclooctyne. This “clickable fatty acid” is a promising tool for further studies in chemical biology. Chapter 7, composed of 2 parts, is dedicated to the synthesis of ether-based Archaea lipids. In this chapter, the introduction is dedicated to the metabolism of the unique Archaea lipids. Part one describes the synthesis of an intermediate in Archaea lipid biosynthesis. This lipid has been used in the department of Molecular Microbiology (GBB, Prof. A. J. M. Driessen) for the identification of CDP-archaeol synthase, the missing link in this biosynthesis. The second part describes the application of the aforementioned Co(II) salen complexes in a total synthesis of cyclo-archaeol. References and footnotes (1) Moss, G. P.; Smith, P. A. S.; Tavernier, D. Pure Appl. Chem. 1995, 67, 1307. (2) Pike, L. J. J. Lipid Res. 2003, 44, 655. (3) Simons, K.; Toomre, D. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 2000, 1, 31. (4) Fernandis, A. Z.; Wenk, M. R. Curr. Opin. Lipidol. 2007, 18, 121. (5) Beilin, L. J.; Burke, V.; Puddey, I. B.; Mori, T. A.; Hodgson, J. M. Clin. Exp. Pharmacol. Physiol. 2001, 28, 1078. (6) Han, X. Front. Biosci. 2007, 12, 2601. (7) Carpentier, Y. A.; Portois, L.; Malaisse, W. J. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 2006, 83, S1499. (8) Eur. J. Biochem. 1977, 79, 11. (9) Hirschmann, H. J. Biol. Chem. 1960, 235, 2762. (10) Gebhardt, H.; Meniche, X.; Tropis, M.; Krämer, R.; Daffé, M.; Morbach, S. Microbiology 2007, 153, 1424. (11) Nakamura, M. T.; Nara, T. Y. Annu. Rev. Nutr. 2004, 24, 345. (12) Qiu, X. Prostaglandins Leukot. Essent. Fatty Acids 2003, 68, 181. (13) Berridge, M. J. Nature 1993, 361, 315. (14) Spiegel, S.; Milstien, S. J. Biol. Chem. 2002, 277, 25851. (15) Summers, S. A. Prog. Lipid Res. 2006, 45, 42. (16) Lehner, R.; Kuksis, A. J. Biol. Chem. 1993, 268, 8781. 18 An Introduction to Phospholipids (17) For other biosynthetic pathways see ref. 18 and 19. (18) (a) Cagliari, A.; Margis, R.; Dos, S. M. F.; Turchetto-Zolet, A. C.; Loss, G.; MargisPinheiro, M. Int. J. Plant Biol. 2011, 2, 40 (b) Coleman, R. A.; Lee, D. P. Prog. Lipid Res. 2004, 43, 134 (c) Karantonis, H. C.; Nomikos, T.; Demopoulos, C. A. Curr. Drug Targets 2009, 10, 302 (d) Lehner, R.; Kuksis, A. Prog. Lipid Res. 1996, 35, 169 (e) Lehner, R.; Kuksis, A. Prog. Lipid Res. 1996, 35, 169 (f) Sorger, D.; Daum, G. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 2003, 61, 289 (g) Sorger, D.; Daum, G. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 2003, 61, 289 (h) Yen, C.-L. E.; Stone, S. J.; Koliwad, S.; Harris, C.; Farese, R. V., Jr. J. Lipid Res. 2008, 49, 2283 (i) Coleman, R. A.; Mashek, D. G. Chem. Rev. 2011, 111, 6359. (19) Weiss, S. B.; Kennedy, E. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1956, 78, 3550. (20) the alternative terms describing same organelle are: lipid bodies, oil bodies and adiposomes (21) Martin, S.; Parton, R. G. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 2006, 7, 373. (22) Pol, A.; Martin, S.; Fernandez, M. A.; Ferguson, C.; Carozzi, A.; Luetterforst, R.; Enrich, C.; Parton, R. G. Mol. Biol. Cell 2004, 15, 99. (23) Ploegh, H. L. Nature 2007, 448, 435. (24) Walther, T. C.; Farese Jr, R. V. Biochim. Biophys. Acta. - Mol. Cell Biol. L. 2009, 1791, 459. (25) Guo, Y.; Cordes, K. R.; Farese, R. V.; Walther, T. C. J. Cell Sci. 2009, 122, 749. (26) the biosynthesis of cardiolipins differs in prokaryotic and eucaryotic cells. The depicted sequence corresponds to the prokaryotic cells. (27) Irvine, R. F. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 1992, 4, 212. (28) Haines, T. H. Biochim. Biophys Acta - Biomembranes 2009, 1788, 1997. (29) Xu, Y.; Malhotra, A.; Ren, M.; Schlame, M. J. Biol. Chem. 2006, 281, 39217. (30) Ruggiero, F. M.; Cafagna, F.; Petruzzella, V.; Gadaleta, M. N.; Quagliariello, E. J. Neurochem. 1992, 59, 487. (31) Oram, J. F. Biochim. Biophys. Acta - Mol. Cell Biol. L. 2000, 1529, 321. (32) Verhoven, B.; Schlegel, R. A.; Williamson, P. J. Exp. Med. 1995, 182, 1597. (33) Brown, A. J.; Snyder, F. J. Biol. Chem. 1983, 258, 4184. (34) Farooqui, A. A.; Horrocks, L. A.; Farooqui, T. Chem. Phys. Lipids 2000, 106, 1. (35) Broniec, A.; Klosinski, R.; Pawlak, A.; Wrona-Krol, M.; Thompson, D.; Sarna, T. Free Radic. Biol. Med. 2011, 50, 892. (36) Prescott, S. M.; Zimmerman, G. A.; Stafforini, D. M.; McIntyre, T. M. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 2000, 69, 419. (37) Anderson, R. J. J. Biol. Chem. 1927, 74, 525. (38) ter Horst, B.; Seshadri, C.; Sweet, L.; Young, D. C.; Feringa, B. L.; Moody, D. B.; Minnaard, A. J. J. Lipid Res. 2010, 51, 1017. 19 1 Chapter 1 1 20