Chemical Formula: C23H46NO6P

Chemical Formula C23H46NO6P

Found 8 metabolite its formula value is C23H46NO6P

LysoPE(P-18:1(9Z)/0:0)

(2-aminoethoxy)[(2R)-2-hydroxy-3-[(1Z,9Z)-octadeca-1,9-dien-1-yloxy]propoxy]phosphinic acid

C23H46NO6P (463.30625860000004)


LysoPE(P-18:1(9Z)/0:0) is a phospho-ether lipid. Ether lipids are lipids in which one or more of the carbon atoms on glycerol is bonded to an alkyl chain via an ether linkage, as opposed to the usual ester linkage. While most phospholipids have a saturated fatty acid on C-1 and an unsaturated fatty acid on C-2 of the glycerol backbone, the fatty acid distribution at the C-1 and C-2 positions of glycerol within phospholipids is continually in flux, owing to phospholipid degradation and the continuous phospholipid remodelling that occurs while these molecules are in membranes. PEs are neutral zwitterions at physiological pH. They mostly have palmitic or stearic acid on carbon 1 and a long chain unsaturated fatty acid (e.g. 18:2, 20:4 and 22:6) on carbon 2. PE synthesis can occur via two pathways. The first requires that ethanolamine be activated by phosphorylation and then coupled to CDP. The ethanolamine is then transferred from CDP-ethanolamine to phosphatidic acid to yield PE. The second involves the decarboxylation of PS. Plasmalogens are glycerol ether phospholipids. They are of two types, alkyl ether (-O-CH2-) and alkenyl ether (-O-CH=CH-). Dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) serves as the glycerol precursor for the synthesis of plasmalogens. Three major classes of plasmalogens have been identified: choline, ethanolamine, and serine derivatives. Ethanolamine plasmalogen is prevalent in myelin and choline plasmalogen is abundant in cardiac tissue. Usually, the highest proportion of the plasmalogen form is in the ethanolamine class with rather less in choline, and commonly little or none in other phospholipids such as phosphatidylinositol. In choline plasmalogens of most tissues, a higher proportion is often of the O-alkyl rather than the O-alkenyl form, but the reverse tends to be true in heart lipids. In animal tissues, the alkyl and alkenyl moieties in both non-polar and phospholipids tend to be rather simple in composition with 16:0, 18:0, and 18:1 (double bond in position 9) predominating. Ether analogues of triacylglycerols, i.e. 1-alkyldiacyl-sn-glycerols, are present at trace levels only if at all in most animal tissues, but they can be major components of some marine lipids.

   

Phosphatidylethanolamine lyso alkenyl 18:1

Phosphatidylethanolamine lyso alkenyl 18:1

C23H46NO6P (463.30625860000004)


   
   

2-aminoethyl [2-hydroxy-3-[(9Z,12Z)-octadeca-9,12-dienoxy]propyl] hydrogen phosphate

2-aminoethyl [2-hydroxy-3-[(9Z,12Z)-octadeca-9,12-dienoxy]propyl] hydrogen phosphate

C23H46NO6P (463.30625860000004)


   

lysophosphatidylethanolamine P-18:1

lysophosphatidylethanolamine P-18:1

C23H46NO6P (463.30625860000004)


A 1-(Z-alk-1-enyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine in which the Z-alk-1-enyl group contains 18 carbons and has 1 additional double bond