Importantly, we developed new methods to obtain proteins directly from ladderane-producing organisms, which are notoriously difficult to work with in the lab. In addition, we adapted various biochemical methods for use with these organisms and their proteins.
Using biophysical methods, we have determined the structures of several of these proteins to a level of detail where we can see how their individual atoms are arranged. This allows us to precisely determine how lipid molecules are bound and modified by these proteins. Among these is the structure of a “complex” of two proteins and a lipid, which shows how the two proteins work together to modify the lipid. Moreover, unexpectedly we found that two other proteins, which were thought to work separately, form a tightly intertwined "complex" with one another, where one protein probably regulates the function of the other. Moreover, of yet another protein we now know the function.