Abstract

The chemical structures of the unusual hopanoid-containing lipid A samples of the lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from three strains of Bradyrhizobium (slow-growing rhizobia) have been established. They differed considerably from other Gram-negative bacteria in regards to the backbone structure, the number of ester-linked long chain hydroxylated fatty acids, as well as the presence of a tertiary residue that consisted of at least one molecule of carboxyl-bacteriohopanediol or its 2-methyl derivative. The structural details of this type of lipid A were established using one- and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy, chemical composition analyses, and mass spectrometry techniques (electrospray ionization Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry and MALDI-TOF-MS). In these lipid A samples the glucosamine disaccharide characteristic for enterobacterial lipid A was replaced by a 2,3-diamino-2,3-dideoxy-d-glucopyranosyl-(GlcpN3N) disaccharide, deprived of phosphate residues, and substituted by an α-d-Manp-(1→6)-α-d-Manp disaccharide substituting C-4' of the non-reducing (distal) GlcpN3N, and one residue of galacturonic acid (d-GalpA) α-(1→1)-linked to the reducing (proximal) amino sugar residue. Amide-linked 12:0(3-OH) and 14:0(3-OH) were identified. Some hydroxy groups of these fatty acids were further esterified by long (ω-1)-hydroxylated fatty acids comprising 26-34 carbon atoms. As confirmed by mass spectrometry techniques, these long chain fatty acids could form two or three acyloxyacyl residues. The triterpenoid derivatives were identified as 34-carboxyl-bacteriohopane-32,33-diol and 34-carboxyl-2β-methyl-bacteriohopane-32,33-diol and were covalently linked to the (ω-1)-hydroxy group of very long chain fatty acid in bradyrhizobial lipid A. Bradyrhizobium japonicum possessed lipid A species with two hopanoid residues.

Highlights

  • Hopanoids are present in bradyrhizobial lipid A preparations

  • In this article we present the unique lipid A structure from different Bradyrhizobium strains, which form two or three acyloxyacyl moieties with VLCFAs and contain one or two hopanoid residues linked covalently as tertiary hydrophobic residue(s) to the hydroxy group(s) of (␻-1)-hydroxy fatty acids

  • We describe unusual hopanoid-containing lipid A samples isolated from LPS of various strains of Bradyrhizobium

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Summary

Background

Hopanoids are present in bradyrhizobial lipid A preparations. Results: Signals from hopanoid carboxyl shows strong correlation with the proton geminal to the hydroxy group of ester-linked long chain fatty acid. The chemical structures of the unusual hopanoid-containing lipid A samples of the lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from three strains of Bradyrhizobium (slow-growing rhizobia) have been established They differed considerably from other Gram-negative bacteria in regards to the backbone structure, the number of ester-linked long chain hydroxylated fatty acids, as well as the presence of a tertiary residue that consisted of at least one molecule of carboxyl-bacteriohopanediol or its 2-methyl derivative. In this article we present the unique lipid A structure from different Bradyrhizobium strains, which form two or three acyloxyacyl moieties with VLCFAs and contain one or two hopanoid residues linked covalently as tertiary hydrophobic residue(s) to the hydroxy group(s) of (␻-1)-hydroxy fatty acids. The first hopanoid-containing lipid A, obtained from LPS of the photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium strain BTAi1, was structurally and functionally characterized [32]

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