Record Information
Version 1.0
Update Date 1/22/2018 12:54:54 PM
Metabolite IDPAMDB006491
Identification
Name: CL(19:0/18:1(11Z)/19:0/18:1(11Z))
Description:CL(19:0/18:1(11Z)/19:0/18:1(11Z)) is a cardiolipin (CL). Cardiolipins are sometimes called a 'double' phospholipid because they have four fatty acid tails, instead of the usual two. CL(19:0/18:1(11Z)/19:0/18:1(11Z)) contains two chains of nonadecanoic acid at the C1 and C3 positions, two chains of (11Z-octadecenoyl) at the C2 and C4 positions. While the theoretical charge of cardiolipins is -2, under normal physiological conditions (pH near 7), the molecule may carry only one negative charge. In prokaryotes such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the enzyme known as diphosphatidylglycerol synthase catalyses the transfer of the phosphatidyl moiety of one phosphatidylglycerol to the free 3'-hydroxyl group of another, with the elimination of one molecule of glycerol. In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which acylates its glycerophospholipids with acyl chains ranging in length from 12 to 19 carbons and possibly containing an unsaturation, or a cyclopropane group more than 100 possible CL molecular species are theoretically possible. Pseudomonas aeruginosa membranes consist of ~5% cardiolipin (CL), 20-25% phosphatidylglycerol (PG), and 70-80% phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) as well as smaller amounts of phosphatidylserine (PS). CL is distributed between the two leaflets of the bilayers and is located preferentially at the poles and septa in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other rod-shaped bacteria. It is known that the polar positioning of the proline transporter ProP and the mechanosensitive ion channel MscS in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is dependent on CL. It is believed that cell shape may influence the localization of CL and the localization of certain membrane proteins.
Structure
Thumb
Synonyms:Not Available
Chemical Formula: C83H158O17P2
Average Molecular Weight: 1490.108
Monoisotopic Molecular Weight: 1489.097427624
InChI Key: BBMHAYBEUKPMCU-QMDKMGRBSA-N
InChI:InChI=1S/C83H158O17P2/c1-5-9-13-17-21-25-29-33-37-41-43-47-51-55-59-63-67-80(85)93-73-78(99-82(87)69-65-61-57-53-49-45-39-35-31-27-23-19-15-11-7-3)75-97-101(89,90)95-71-77(84)72-96-102(91,92)98-76-79(100-83(88)70-66-62-58-54-50-46-40-36-32-28-24-20-16-12-8-4)74-94-81(86)68-64-60-56-52-48-44-42-38-34-30-26-22-18-14-10-6-2/h27-28,31-32,77-79,84H,5-26,29-30,33-76H2,1-4H3,(H,89,90)(H,91,92)/b31-27-,32-28-/t78-,79-/m1/s1
CAS number: Not Available
IUPAC Name:[2-hydroxy-3-({hydroxy[(2R)-3-(nonadecanoyloxy)-2-[(11Z)-octadec-11-enoyloxy]propoxy]phosphoryl}oxy)propoxy][(2R)-3-(nonadecanoyloxy)-2-[(11Z)-octadec-11-enoyloxy]propoxy]phosphinic acid
Traditional IUPAC Name: 2-hydroxy-3-{[hydroxy((2R)-3-(nonadecanoyloxy)-2-[(11Z)-octadec-11-enoyloxy]propoxy)phosphoryl]oxy}propoxy((2R)-3-(nonadecanoyloxy)-2-[(11Z)-octadec-11-enoyloxy]propoxy)phosphinic acid
SMILES:[H]C(O)(COP(O)(=O)OC[C@@]([H])(COC(=O)CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC)OC(=O)CCCCCCCCC\C=C/CCCCCC)COP(O)(=O)OC[C@@]([H])(COC(=O)CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC)OC(=O)CCCCCCCCC\C=C/CCCCCC
Chemical Taxonomy
Taxonomy DescriptionThis compound belongs to the class of organic compounds known as cardiolipins. These are glycerophospholipids in which the O1 and O3 oxygen atoms of the central glycerol moiety are each linked to one 1,2-diacylglycerol chain. Their general formula is OC(COP(O)(=O)OC[C@@H](CO[R1])O[R2])COP(O)(=O)OC[C@@H](CO[R3])O[R4], where R1-R4 are four fatty acyl chains.
Kingdom Organic compounds
Super ClassLipids and lipid-like molecules
Class Glycerophospholipids
Sub ClassGlycerophosphoglycerophosphoglycerols
Direct Parent Cardiolipins
Alternative Parents
Substituents
  • Cardiolipin
  • Tetracarboxylic acid or derivatives
  • Fatty acid ester
  • Dialkyl phosphate
  • Fatty acyl
  • Alkyl phosphate
  • Organic phosphate
  • Phosphoric acid ester
  • Organic phosphoric acid derivative
  • Carboxylic acid ester
  • Secondary alcohol
  • Carboxylic acid derivative
  • Hydrocarbon derivative
  • Organic oxide
  • Alcohol
  • Carbonyl group
  • Organooxygen compound
  • Aliphatic acyclic compound
Molecular Framework Aliphatic acyclic compounds
External Descriptors Not Available
Physical Properties
State: Not Available
Charge:-2
Melting point: Not Available
Experimental Properties:
PropertyValueSource
Predicted Properties
PropertyValueSource
Water Solubility6.99e-05 mg/mLALOGPS
logP9.06ALOGPS
logP27.43ChemAxon
logS-7.3ALOGPS
pKa (Strongest Acidic)1.59ChemAxon
pKa (Strongest Basic)-3.4ChemAxon
Physiological Charge-2ChemAxon
Hydrogen Acceptor Count9ChemAxon
Hydrogen Donor Count3ChemAxon
Polar Surface Area236.95 Å2ChemAxon
Rotatable Bond Count86ChemAxon
Refractivity418.34 m3·mol-1ChemAxon
Polarizability180.65 Å3ChemAxon
Number of Rings0ChemAxon
Bioavailability0ChemAxon
Rule of FiveYesChemAxon
Ghose FilterYesChemAxon
Veber's RuleYesChemAxon
MDDR-like RuleYesChemAxon
Biological Properties
Cellular Locations: Membrane
Reactions:
Pathways: Not Available
Spectra
Spectra:
Spectrum TypeDescriptionSplash Key
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 10V, Positivesplash10-00rx-0190401201-e838aae67dcec3b41ff0View in MoNA
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 20V, Positivesplash10-01di-0191101221-bb250deb42986a7fa423View in MoNA
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 40V, Positivesplash10-0699-0093014411-6a8c74197cf3f4329bc1View in MoNA
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 10V, Negativesplash10-003b-0090200000-cebfd0718b9bba37e12aView in MoNA
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 20V, Negativesplash10-004j-2090100110-4b62e8ed8a68083551c4View in MoNA
Predicted LC-MS/MSPredicted LC-MS/MS Spectrum - 40V, Negativesplash10-004j-9080002100-caeaad2b5a38d90cca97View in MoNA
References
References:
  • De Siervo, A. J. (1969). "Alterations in the phospholipid composition of Escherichia coli B during growth at different temperatures." J Bacteriol 100:1342-1349. Pubmed: 4902814
  • Garrett, T. A., O'Neill, A. C., Hopson, M. L. (2012). "Quantification of cardiolipin molecular species in Escherichia coli lipid extracts using liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization mass spectrometry." Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 26:2267-2274. Pubmed: 22956318
  • Kanehisa, M., Goto, S., Sato, Y., Furumichi, M., Tanabe, M. (2012). "KEGG for integration and interpretation of large-scale molecular data sets." Nucleic Acids Res 40:D109-D114. Pubmed: 22080510
  • Keseler, I. M., Collado-Vides, J., Santos-Zavaleta, A., Peralta-Gil, M., Gama-Castro, S., Muniz-Rascado, L., Bonavides-Martinez, C., Paley, S., Krummenacker, M., Altman, T., Kaipa, P., Spaulding, A., Pacheco, J., Latendresse, M., Fulcher, C., Sarker, M., Shearer, A. G., Mackie, A., Paulsen, I., Gunsalus, R. P., Karp, P. D. (2011). "EcoCyc: a comprehensive database of Escherichia coli biology." Nucleic Acids Res 39:D583-D590. Pubmed: 21097882
  • Uniprot Consortium (2012). "Reorganizing the protein space at the Universal Protein Resource (UniProt)." Nucleic Acids Res 40:D71-D75. Pubmed: 22102590
  • Yurtsever D. (2007). Fatty acid methyl ester profiling of Enterococcus and Esherichia coli for microbial source tracking. M.sc. Thesis. Villanova University: U.S.A
Synthesis Reference: Not Available
Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) Not Available
External Links:
ResourceLink
CHEBI IDNot Available
HMDB IDNot Available
Pubchem Compound IDNot Available
Kegg IDNot Available
ChemSpider IDNot Available
Wikipedia IDNot Available
BioCyc IDNot Available