What are lipopeptides?

Lipopeptides are linear or cyclic peptides that are conjugated (via amide, thioether, or thioester linkages)
to lipids or long aliphatic chains, such as myristic acid, palmitic acid, prenyl groups, geranyl groups,
farnesyl groups, and geranylgeranyl groups.

 

Addition of a lipid chain formed by three (farnesyl) or 4 (geranylgeranyl) isoprene units to a free thiol group.

Myristoylation and palmitoylation are post translational modifications
where myristoyl or palmitoyl groups are covalently attached by an amide bond or thioester bond
to the aliphatic amino-group of residues or to a mercaptan-group of cysteine residues in peptides.

Featured Citations

KRAS Prenylation Is Required for Bivalent Binding with Calmodulin in a Nucleotide-Independent Manner.

Agamasu C, Ghirlando R, Taylor T, Messing S, Tran TH, Bindu L, Tonelli M, Nissley DV, McCormick F, Stephen AG.
Biophysical journal. 2019 Mar 19;116(6):1049-63. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2019.02.004
From AnaSpec: KSKTKC-FMe, AAAAC-FMe, KSKTKC-geranyl methylated (GMe), and KSKTKC-prenyl methylated (PMe)

CD1d-restricted T cell activation by nonlipidic small molecules.

Van Rhijn I, Young DC, Im JS, Levery SB, Illarionov PA, Besra GS, Porcelli SA, Gumperz J, Cheng TY, Moody DB.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2004 Sep 14;101(37):13578-83.
From AnaSpec: Polyclonal human T cells were derived with many antigens, including a mixture of synthetic lipopeptides