Lipid of the Month

Each month we highlight a lipid of scientific interest. The LIPID MAPS® Lipid of the Month Archive lists lipids highlighted from 2015 - present.

February 2026

Lipid of the month 36-methyl-21Z,29Z-heptatriacontadien-37-olide

In the middle of February comes the beginning of a new year in the Chinese lunar calendar. We enter the year of the horse in the Chinese zodiac.

Horse lipids have been studied for a long time, particularly the steroid hormones. Compounds such as equilin, hippulin1 and estrone sulfate2 were first discovered in horse urine, presumably because it is available in significant quantities. In the days before modern, sensitive equipment, large amounts of samples were needed for any biochemical analysis.

Other lipids are found in the sebum of horses- the oily excretion on the skin. These include a range of long-chain (34-38 carbons) lactones with two double bonds such as 36-methyl-21Z,29Z-heptatriacontadien-37-olide. While a series of similar lactones were characterised in 19843, it seems the function of these molecules remains enigmatic.

Though they are closely related species, horse and zebra sebum lactones differ. Horse lactones have been found to be branched (mostly formed from iso- fatty acids), whereas those from zebra were unbranched4. We understand however that there are easier ways to tell the difference between a horse and a zebra without requiring extensive molecular exploration of their skin secretions!

If you’re celebrating starting the year of the horse this month, Gong hei fat choy- 恭喜发财

References

Lipid of the Month Archive

2026
2025
2024
2023

December 2023

Lipid of the Month

It’s the time of year when theories regarding the famously red nose of Santa’s lead reindeer, Rudolf, come to the fore. Some suggest a dense network of blood vessels1, but a more lipid-centric cause seems to have been overlooked.

The carotenoid lycopene is a deep red colour and found in many vegetables, including carrots which children in some countries traditionally leave for Rudolf on Christmas eve.

Lycopene is a 40 carbon tetraterpenoid made up of eight isoprene units with 11 conjugated double bonds that absorb light to give the molecule its colour. In plants it is an accessory pigment to chlorophyll in photosynthesis, and in fruits such as tomatoes it signals the fruit’s ripeness to animals which eat the fruit and disperse the seeds. Lycopene is a precursor to other carotenoids such as carotene, for which carrots are more well known. Carotene is metabolised to make the visual pigment retinal, but the saying that eating carrots will help one see in the dark has little evidence to support it. Night-vision would undoubtedly be important for a nocturnally aviating cervid however.

Perhaps the many children leaving carrots for Rudolf don’t realise that carrots aren’t part of the natural diet of the reindeer. The carrot, Daucus carota, was domesticated in Asia2, but Rangifer tarandus the reindeer, is only partially domesticated3 and native to the Arctic region. The species may be unable to handle such an annual abundance of lycopene and one must consider that Rudolf may have a genetic condition whereupon the excess accumulates in his muzzle. Presumably this does not cause any health issues as he and his companions are over 80 years old and remain able to tour the globe in one evening. Indeed a navigational nose has clearly been advantageous to this particular individual!

References

  • Why Rudolph's nose is red: observational study
    BMJ
    2012
    DOI 10.1136/bmj.e8311
  • Population genomics identifies genetic signatures of carrot domestication and improvement and uncovers the origin of high-carotenoid orange carrots
    Nat Plants
    2023
    DOI 10.1038/s41477-023-01526-6
  • Investigating the domestication and early management of reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) in the Sámi archaeological context from teeth geometric morphometrics Sci Rep 2023 10.1038/s41598-023-33422-6.
    Sci Rep
    2023
    DOI 10.1038/s41598-023-33422-6


November 2023

Lipid of the Month

Throughout this month, men worldwide will be seen with facial hair they usually don’t have. It will be displayed with varying levels of sartorial elegance in support of Movember- a campaign to raise awareness of men’s health issues including diseases such as prostate cancer.

As with other cancers, lipids play a role in prostate cancer biochemistry with tumours having a disregulated lipid metabolism in general1. One of the lipids which is produced in larger amounts than normal is 13S-hydroxy-9Z,11E-octadecadienoic acid, or 13S-HODE.

13S-HODE is elevated due to increased expression of 15-LOX which converts linoleic acid to 13S-HpODE. This is then reduced to 13S-HODE. The amount of 15-LOX correlates with the proliferation of the cancer2.

13S-HODE is a signaling molecule, which binds to peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR) and alters their activity in controlling gene expression. The genes under PPAR control include, among others, some of those related to tumorigenesis and lipid metabolism.

A major source of linoleic acid in our diet is vegetable oil, so it’s unsurprising that 13-HODE is present in these oils too. In fact it is also named coriolic acid after the coraria seed oil from which it was isolated3. In plants 13-HODE is an intermediate on the pathway to jasmonic acids- plant signalling hormones which are structurally similar to the prostaglandins.

This month, if you see a man with a moustache that really doesn’t suit him, perhaps he is sporting it to highlight men’s health and, very indirectly, the lipids involved in it.

References

  • Genetics of lipid metabolism in prostate cancer
    Nat Genet
    2018
    DOI 10.1038/s41588-017-0037-0
  • Concordant induction of 15-lipoxygenase-1 and mutant p53 expression in human prostate adenocarcinoma: correlation with Gleason staging
    Carcinogenesis
    2000
    DOI 10.1093/carcin/21.10.1777
  • Structure and intraglyceride distribution of coriolic acid
    Lipids
    1968
    DOI 10.1007/BF02531282


October 2023

Lipid of the Month

The prostaglandins are generally formed from arachidonic acid, liberated from phospholipids in the membrane. In contrast, the prostaglandin ethanolamides, or prostamides, are formed from a different starting point, but via the same enzymatic pathway. Rather than adding an ethanolamine to the acidic part of the prostaglandin (or precursor), the cyclooxygenase enzymes act on anandamide.

Prostaglandin F2α ethanolamide, otherwise known as prostamide F2α, or PGF2alpha-EA is perhaps the most well studied of the prostamides. It has been implicated in the pain response to inflammation in mice1. Synthetic analogues such as bimatoprost are used to treat glaucoma2 and very recently, a paper has suggested a new role for prostamde F2α3- it stimulates preadipocyte proliferation in white adipose tissue.

No doubt the full role of these lipids in human health is yet to be determined.

References

  • Discovery of prostamide F2α and its role in inflammatory pain and dorsal horn nociceptive neuron hyperexcitability
    PLoS One
    2012
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0031111
  • Promising alternative clinical uses of prostaglandin F2α analogs: beyond the eyelashes
    J Am Acad Dermatol
    2015
    DOI 10.1016/j.jaad.2014.10.012
  • New role for the anandamide metabolite prostaglandin F2α ethanolamide: Rolling preadipocyte proliferation
    J Lipid Res
    2023
    DOI 10.1016/j.jlr.2023.100444


September 2023

Lipid of the Month

This summer many places in the northern hemisphere have broken records. Extreme temperatures in excess of 40 degrees C (104 F) have been recorded in parts of Europe, North America and China. A great deal of sweat has been sweated!

In males, one component of that sweat is androstadienone, a steroid secreted particularly in the armpits which acts as a pheromone - a molecule released into the environment which affects the behaviour of others, usually by smell.

Smelling androstadienone has been shown to alter the level of the hormone cortisol in females,1 a stress-response hormone, and cause a range of changes in behaviour. Its scent has been reported to alter the perception of what emotion a face is showing, modulate aggression, make men less cooperative (but also more cooperative!) and women more generous and relaxed.2-6 As with any pheromone, the smell might not be consciously ‘smelled’ for a molecule to influence behaviour. To add to the confusion, not everyone agrees that androstadienone is a pheromone at all!8

But, whether or not your scent alters the behaviour of those around you, in hot weather deodorant is probably a good idea.

References

  • Smelling a Single Component of Male Sweat Alters Levels of Cortisol in Women
    J Neurosci
    2007
    DOI 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4430-06.2007
  • Olfaction in the Multisensory Processing of Faces: A Narrative Review of the Influence of Human Body Odors
    Front Psychol
    2021
    DOI 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.750944
  • Androstadienone modulates human aggression in a sex-dependent manner
    Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci
    2023
    DOI 10.1093/scan/nsad006
  • Androstadienone, a Chemosignal Found in Human Sweat, Increases Individualistic Behavior and Decreases Cooperative Responses in Men
    Chem Senses
    2018
    DOI 10.1093/chemse/bjy002
  • A putative human pheromone, androstadienone, increases cooperation between men
    PLoS One
    2013
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0062499
  • The Putative Chemosignal Androstadienone Makes Women More Generou
    J Neurosci Psychol Econ
    2016
    DOI 10.1037/npe0000055
  • Behavioral and electrophysiological effects of androstadienone, a human pheromone
    Psychoneuroendocrinology
    2000
    DOI 10.1016/S0306-4530(99)00056-6
  • Reproducible research into human chemical communication by cues and pheromones: learning from psychology's renaissance
    Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
    2020
    DOI 10.1098/rstb.2019.0262


August 2023

Lipid of the Month

Cut open a jagua fruit and in a few seconds blue veins begin to form in the white flesh. An iridoid monoterpene called genipin is responsible for the unusual colour. The fruit, from Genipa americana, a plant related to coffee, is native to tropical forests in South America. It is used by indigenous people as a dye to paint the skin.

Genipin forms the blue colour when it polymerises and reacts with amines in the presence of oxygen1. It is of great interest to the food industry as natural blue pigments are rare and difficult to obtain. In fact more than one patent for this use of genipin has been filed. It also has potential uses as a therapeutic agent with suggestions that it may be active against cancer, diabetes, have antiviral and anti-allergy properties2. Whether all, or any, of these properties translate to the clinic remains to be seen. Of course there are ethical and ecological issues around large-scale genipin production from either farmed, or wild-harvested jaguar fruit3.

The iridoid monoterpene family is named after the first described member Iridomyrmecin, found in Iridomyrmex, or rainbow ants. The iridoid family is found in plants and some insects, though these may be obtained through their diet. While at first glance, iridoids might not seem to be lipids, they are formed from geranial, a common prenol precursor, by cyclisation of the linear monoterpene oxo-geranial4.

References

  • Studies on the Blue Pigments Produced from Genipin and Methylamine. I. Structures of the Brownish-Red Pigments, Intermediates Leading to the Blue Pigments
    Chem Pharm Bull
    1994
    DOI 10.1248/cpb.42.668
  • Novel Findings regarding the Bioactivity of the Natural Blue Pigment Genipin in Human Diseases
    Int J Mol Sci
    2012
    DOI 10.3390/ijms23020902
  • Natural blue
    Science
    2023
    DOI 10.1126/science.adj2001
  • An alternative route to cyclic terpenes by reductive cyclization in iridoid biosynthesis
    Nature
    2012
    DOI 10.1038/nature11692


July 2023

Lipid of the Month

Several species of fish travel from the sea to freshwater rivers in order to spawn. Famously, salmon and eels do so, but the lamprey, a ‘primitive’ jawless fish, is also anadromous (the term for a fish moving from salt to freshwater to complete its life cycle). Lamprey larvae live in rivers for many years before migrating out to sea where they feed by parasitizing fish. Once mature, they return to the rivers to reproduce.

An adult lamprey finds its way to a suitable stream by smell. It detects a lipid-based pheromone called petromyric acid A1which is secreted by larval lampreys and washed downstream in the current. Adults sensing this hydroxy fatty acid containing a tetrahydrofuran ring know that the river is a good breeding ground, because it already has lots of baby lampreys living in it.

Lampreys have been shown to respond to petromyric acid A at concentrations as low as 10-11 M and there is a possibility that it could be used to control lamprey populations in places such as the Great Lakes where they are considered an invasive species.

References



June 2023

Lipid of the Month

With summer in full swing in the northern hemisphere (a whole week without rain here in Cardiff!) plants are growing prolifically. Some are in the wrong place and need killing off.


In the 1990s a weedkiller was approved with a lipid active ingredient, pelargonic acid. This nine-carbon fatty acid is a ‘safe’ herbicide as it is not toxic to humans and does not persist in the ground. It’s a ‘burn-down’ chemical so called because it only kills the foliage, causing it to look burned. It doesn’t kill the roots of the plant.


Pelargonic acid (or nonanoic acid to give it its formal name) is so called as it was first isolated in a mixture of its esters from pelargonium plants1. That mixture shared the scent of pelargoniums- non-hardy plants often called geraniums and very popular in flower borders. Pelargonic acid is also found naturally in fruits and dairy produce.


Pelargonic acid is thought to act essentially as a detergent, causing permeability of cell membranes and those of organelles. This liberates chlorophyll which, as a powerful oxidising agent, reacts with many cellular components, including membrane lipids, and damages them2. That would explain why it works best on sunny days and in warm weather. Fortunately, those weather conditions, at least at the moment, are in ready supply.

References

  • On a common origin of the acids (CH)n O4 with a boiling-point under 300° centigrade
    Mem. Proc. Chem. Soc
    1845
    DOI 10.1039/MP8450300235
  • Phytotoxic activity of middle-chain fatty acids II: peroxidation and membrane effects
    Pesticide Biochem Physiol
    2004
    DOI 10.1016/j.pestbp.2004.06.010


May 2023

Lipid of the Month

Undoubtedly one of the most talked-about events this month will be the coronation in London of King Charles III in a ceremony where lipids play a central role. Since before recorded history, kings, queens, and other leaders have been anointed with perfumed oils as part of their investiture rituals.

The recipe for the oil to anoint British monarchs has been unchanged for hundreds of years, however for Charles III, some ingredients will be missing. It will lack civetone (from the glands of the civet cat) and ambergris. The latter is a waxy substance, the origins of which have been the subject of (often wild) speculation for centuries. It’s now known to be formed in the guts of sperm whales1.

The main lipid of ambergris is ambrein, a triterpene which breaks down to give various scented molecules. Ambergris has been prized in the perfume industry for centuries and has traditionally been added to the base olive oil (containing triglycerides like triolein) along with other richly perfumed ingredients for the coronation. 

Ambergris is rare, sometimes found floating in the sea, or washed up on beaches having been (presumably) excreted by the whale. Exactly how a sperm whale synthesises ambrein is unknown. It almost certainly starts from squalene and there is evidence that bacterial enzymes (likely via the whale’s gut microbiota) play a part2. The unknown nature of ambrein’s synthesis only adds to the allure of ambergris. 

As Herman Melville comments in Moby Dick “Who would think, then, that such fine ladies and gentlemen should regale themselves with an essence found in the inglorious bowels of a sick whale!”. This month, it won’t be Britain’ new monarch! 


References



April 2023

Lipid of the Month

Think of a fossil, and likely you’ll picture an ammonite peeking out of a rock, or maybe that huge T. rex skeleton in a museum. But life leaves chemical fossils behind too.

Arborinol, is a pentacyclic triterpenoid named after the shrub Glycosmis arborea (now called Glycosmis pentaphylla) whose role in vivo seems yet to be deciphered. It’s one of many triterpenoids made by flowering plants, which remain after a plant decomposes. These are often converted to arborane which is detectable in rocks today. Thought to be found only in plants, the presence of arborane compounds was seen as a marker for their existence at the time the rock was soil at the earth’s surface. The isomer of arborinol, isoarborinol has even been found intact in rock which is 50 million years old1.

The discovery that bacteria can also synthesise arborane molecules2 means that arborane cannot be used exclusively as a marker for flowering plants, and solves a mystery of arborane in rocks which pre-date the origin of plants.

The structure of arborinol was solved using x-ray crystallography in 1965 by Olga Kennard3. Kennard had the vision that bringing together molecular data in a central database would be vital for science and the whole would be greater than the sum of the parts. She was director of the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre for many years and was also instrumental in founding several other databases, including PDB and ENA. By pioneering the archiving of so much chemical data in central repositories, Dr Kennard, who died last month aged 98, enabled a vast number of scientists to use these data. Her contribution to science is incalculable.

References



March 2023

Lipid of the Month

With the possible exception of cholesterol, it’s not often for a lipid to be in the news, but octan-3-one managed this recently thanks to its apparent nematicidal role in the oyster mushroom.

Predictably headlines varied from the measured  “The mushroom that is both delicacy and predator” to the somewhat less measured “Killer mushroom releases fungus ‘nerve gas’ to paralyse victims before ‘rapid death’”.

The oyster mushroom, Pleurotus ostreatus is a delicacy in some parts of the world, naturally living on decaying wood which is poor in nitrogen.  It’s known to kill nematodes, and ingest them as a source of nitrogen. A recent paper in Sci Adv1 has identified octan-3-one as the compound responsible for dispatching the nematodes. Released from fragile structures called toxocysts, octan-3-one causes paralysis and cell death in the nematode by disrupting cell membrane integrity.

Octan-3-one is not unique to P. ostreatus, it is a volatile, scented molecule used as a pheromone in insects and plants2 and found in other fungi too. A question that remains to be answered though, is how the toxocyst stores a compound which disrupts nematode cell membranes, without causing damage to its own.

References

  • A carnivorous mushroom paralyzes and kills nematodes via a volatile ketone
    Sci Adv
    2023
    DOI 10.1126/sciadv.ade4809
  • Freshly Distilled Oil of the Leaves of Rasmarinus Officianalis L Contained 3-Octanone
    Z Naturforsch
    1978
    DOI 10.1515/znc-1978-1-226


February 2023

Lipid of the Month

Over 100 years ago, Krabbe and Copenhagen described a rare inherited neurological condition which would become known as globoid cell leukodystrophy, or Krabbe disease1. It’s now known to be characterized by an accumulation of the lipid psychosine in the membranes of cells such as Schwann cells and oligodendrocytes in the nervous system. It leaves these cells unable to provide the myelination around nerve axons which is necessary for nerve function.

Psychosine accumulates due to a deficiency in an enzyme encoded by the GALC gene. The most common mutations in GALC cause a form of Krabbe disease which is usually fatal in infancy, though some mutations result in an adult-onset phenotype2. GALC encodes galactocerebrosidase which ordinarily cleaves the galactose headgroup from galactoceramides (for example, from (GalCer d18:1/16:0)  in their degradation pathway. In its absence, the acyl chain of the molecule can be removed by acid ceramidase, leaving galactosyl-sphingosine, or psychosine, behind.

Evidence suggests that build up of psychosine, essentially ‘lyso’ galactosylceramide, disrupts the properties of the membrane3 (ref) which may contribute to the disease phenotype.

While Krabbe disease was described in 1916, psychosine was described much earlier. It was mentioned by Thudichum in 1884 in his treatise on the chemical constitution of the brain. Presumably it was named after its isolation from brain extracts (psycho- referring to the mind). The link between psychosine and Krabbe disease was made fifty years ago in 19724.

References

  • A New Familial, Infantile Form Of Diffuse Brain-Sclerosis
    Brain
    1916
    DOI 10.1093/brain/39.1-2.74
  • A novel compound heterozygous mutation in GALC associated with adult-onset Krabbe disease: case report and literature review
    Neurogenetics
    2022
    DOI 10.1007/s10048-021-00682-1
  • Psychosine, the cytotoxic sphingolipid that accumulates in globoid cell leukodystrophy, alters membrane architecture
    J Lipid Res
    2013
    DOI 10.1194/jlr.M039610
  • Globoid cell leukodystrophy: Additional deficiency of psychosine galactosidase
    Biochem Biophys Res Commun
    1972
    DOI 10.1016/0006-291X(72)90381-6


January 2023

Lipid of the Month

Over the festive season, it’s likely many of our readers might have enjoyed an alcoholic drink or two. In doing so, they will have formed phosphatidylethanol in their blood, especially in red blood cell membranes. It has been suggested that phosphatidylethanol is responsible for some of the effects of alcohol on the body1.

Phosphatidylethanol is formed from phosphatidylcholine by the enzyme phospholipase D2. This enzyme removes the choline headgroup, generally using water to attack the choline-phosphate bond to form phosphatidic acid. However, ethanol can substitute for water in the reaction, resulting in phosphatidylethanol instead. The most common form detected has palmitoyl and oleoyl acyl chains (PEth 16:0/18:1)3, consistent with the most prevalent acyl chains in phosphatidylcholine.

Phosphatidylethanol remains in the body much longer than ethanol itself, potentially for 2-3 weeks. It acts as a clinical and forensic marker for alcohol consumption, and its abuse4, for example in assessing alcohol consumption prior to liver transplants, or in drink-driving cases, or even post-mortem. It’s said to be a more reliable marker than asking people how much alcohol they drink as there are many reasons why people might underestimate.

Given how long phosphatidylethanol remains in your system, and depending how festive your festive season was, it may be clear of your body by the end of ‘Dry January’, if you take part in that.


References



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