Abstract

Structurally diverse, specialized lipids are crucial components of microbial membranes and other organelles and play essential roles in ecological functioning. The detection of such lipids in the environment can reveal not only the occurrence of specific microbes but also the physicochemical conditions to which they are adapted to. Traditionally, liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry allowed for the detection of lipids based on chromatographic separation and individual peak identification, resulting in a limited data acquisition and targeting of certain lipid groups. Here, we explored a comprehensive profiling of microbial lipids throughout the water column of a marine euxinic basin (Black Sea) using ultra high-pressure liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS/MS). An information theory framework combined with molecular networking based on the similarity of the mass spectra of lipids enabled us to capture lipidomic diversity and specificity in the environment, identify novel lipids, differentiate microbial sources within a lipid group, and discover potential biomarkers for biogeochemical processes. The workflow presented here allows microbial ecologists and biogeochemists to process quickly and efficiently vast amounts of lipidome data to understand microbial lipids characteristics in ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Microorganisms play a primary role in the biochemical cycles of ecosystems

  • We applied two analytical and computational methodologies: (1) a molecular network based on the MS/MS spectra similarities (Wang et al, 2016; Nothias et al, 2020) and (2) information theory based on Shannon entropy of the lipidome distribution (Martínez and Reyes-Valdés, 2008; Li et al, 2020; Figure 1A)

  • We carried out comprehensive lipidomic profiling of microbial communities throughout the water column of the Black Sea using UHPLC-HRMS/MS spectra

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Summary

Introduction

Microorganisms play a primary role in the biochemical cycles of ecosystems. Microbial lipids are structurally very diverse and have proven to be of great taxonomic value (Sohlenkamp and Geiger, 2016). Many microorganisms regulate their membrane lipid composition in order to adapt to environmental stress, these lipids have the potential to be used as biomarkers for specific environmental conditions (e.g., Benning et al, 1995; Van Mooy et al, 2009; Geiger et al, 2010; Martin et al, 2011; Popendorf et al, 2011b; Elling et al, 2015)

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