Acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) are the scaffolds for fatty acid biosynthesis in living systems, rendering them essential to a comprehensive understanding of lipid metabolism. However, accurate quantitative methods to assess individual acyl-ACPs do not exist. We developed a robust method to quantify acyl-ACPs to the picogram level. We successfully identified acyl-ACP elongation intermediates (3-hydroxyacyl-ACPs and 2,3-trans-enoyl-ACPs) and unexpected medium-chain (C10:1, C14:1) and polyunsaturated long-chain (C16:3) acyl-ACPs, indicating both the sensitivity of the method and how current descriptions of lipid metabolism and ACP function are incomplete. Such ACPs are likely important to medium-chain lipid production for fuels and highlight poorly understood lipid remodeling events in the chloroplast. The approach is broadly applicable to type II fatty acid synthase systems found in plants and bacteria as well as mitochondria from mammals and fungi because it capitalizes on a highly conserved Asp-Ser-Leu-Asp amino acid sequence in ACPs to which acyl groups attach. Our method allows for sensitive quantification using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry with de novo-generated standards and an isotopic dilution strategy and will fill a gap in our understanding, providing insights through quantitative exploration of fatty acid biosynthesis processes for optimal biofuels, renewable feedstocks, and medical studies in health and disease.
Short title: Carbon assimilation in sorghum spikelets One-sentence summary: Apparently non-functional floral structures (spikelets) provide carbon for the developing grain in sorghum and two related wild species, thereby contributing to yield (fitness).
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