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Substantial contribution of in situ produced bacterial lipids to the sedimentary lipidome
Ding, S.; Bale, N.J.; Cutmore, A.; von Meijenfeldt, F. A.B.; Schouten, S.; Sinninghe Damsté, J.S (2025). Substantial contribution of in situ produced bacterial lipids to the sedimentary lipidome. ISME Commun. 5(1): ycaf191. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ismeco/ycaf191
In: ISME Communications. Springer Nature: London. e-ISSN 2730-6151, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    sedimentary lipidome; untargeted lipidomics; bacterial sphingolipids; in situ production; black sea

Authors  Top 
  • von Meijenfeldt, F. A.B., more
  • Schouten, S., more
  • Sinninghe Damsté, J.S, more

Abstract
    The sedimentary lipid pool is comprised of a myriad of individual components. Due to their importance for organic carbon sequestration and their application in paleoclimatic and geobiological reconstructions, its composition has been studied for many decades with targeted approaches but an overall view on its composition is still lacking. In part this uncertainty relates to the different sources of sedimentary lipids, they can be both delivered from the overlying water column by sedimentation, but also produced in situ by sediment dwelling organisms. Another uncertainty relates to the differing degree of preservation, both between lipid groups and relative to other organic matters. Here we conduct an untargeted analysis of the sedimentary lipidome in the Black Sea using ultra high-pressure liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS2). Besides commonly reported phytoplankton-derived fossil lipids, a diverse and abundant set of sphingolipids was discovered, accounting for ~20% of the sedimentary lipidome. We hypothesize that these sphingolipids are produced in situ by sedimentary anaerobic bacteria, which likely use sphingolipids instead of phospholipids, probably because phospholipids are preferentially utilized in the uppermost layers of the anoxic sediments. Our results suggest that while phytoplankton-derived lipids contribute 50%–60% of the sedimentary lipidome, the importance of bacterial lipids, particularly in situ produced sphingolipids, may have been overlooked.

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