Lipid A forms the hydrophobic anchor of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the signature glycolipid of Gram-negative bacterial outer membranes. It consists of a bisphosphorylated β-(1→6)-linked D-glucosamine disaccharide acylated with six 3-hydroxy fatty acids that confer endotoxin activity through TLR4/MD2 activation. Essential for outer membrane asymmetry and endotoxin-mediated immune responses (IC50 ≈ 0.1 ng/mL), its conserved biosynthetic pathway distinguishes bacterial glycolipids from eukaryotic membrane glycoconjugates.
Molecular Structure
Lipid A is centered on a GlcNβ1-6GlcN backbone with phosphate substitutions typically at the 1 and 4' positions (or structural variants in some species). The canonical form is hexa-acylated with R-3-hydroxymyristoyl (14:0 3-OH) chains at positions 2, 2', 3, and 3', while secondary acyl chains such as lauroyl or palmitoleoyl may be added. The classical structure observed in many bacterial strains has a molecular weight of approximately 1800 Da and adopts a conical molecular geometry with an estimated headgroup area near 60 Ų. The core oligosaccharide extension is connected via Kdo residues.
Biophysical Properties
Lipid A exhibits rigid gel-phase packing behavior, with transition temperatures typically above 45°C due to β-hydroxy acyl chain interactions that promote crystalline lattice formation. Divalent cations such as Mg²⁺ and Ca²⁺ stabilize the negatively charged phosphate groups through ionic bridging. Structural heterogeneity influences biological activity: hexa-acylated forms are strongly immunostimulatory, penta-acylated forms show reduced activity, and tetra-acylated variants are generally weakly toxic or non-toxic. The molecule can self-organize into micellar or bilayer assemblies that mimic bacterial outer membrane asymmetry.

