A large number of mammalian proteins are anchored to the cell membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. Biosynthetic intermediates of the GPI anchor have been identified in mammalian cells. The early GPI precursors are sensitive to phosphatidylinositol (PI)-specific phospholipase C (PLC). However, all of the later GPI precursors, which contain 1 or more mannose residues, are PI-PLC-resistant, suggesting that there is another unidentified precursor. Here, we report the identification of this missing link. This GPI precursor can only be labeled with glucosamine and inositol, and is resistant to PI-PLC but sensitive to GPI-phospholipase D. It accumulates in large quantity only in mutants which are defective in the addition of the first mannose residue to the elongating GPI core. Thus, fatty acylation of glucosaminylphosphatidylinositol, to render it PI-PLC-resistant, is an obligatory step in the biosynthesis of mammalian GPI anchor precursors.