Abstract

A series of C 15 –C 20 mid-chain methoxylated fatty acids (FAs) has been tentatively identified in suspended particulate matter samples from within the chemocline of the Cariaco Basin. The concentrations appeared to be highest (50 ng/l) within the core of the chemocline (245–256 m), where they constituted 25% of the total FAs, 9-methoxy-C 16:0 and 10-methoxy-C 16:0 being 73% of the total methoxy acids. Mid-chain methoxy acids in the chemocline had δ 13 C values of ca. −34‰. In stable isotope probing experiments using 13 C labeled bicarbonate and various sulfur species ( S 2 O 3 2 - , SO 3 2 - and particulate S 0 ), up to 80% of 9-/10-methoxy-C 16:0 were 13 C labeled when thiosulfate was provided. Therefore, we propose that mid-chain methoxy FAs are key membrane lipids in sulfur-metabolizing chemoautotrophs within the core of the chemocline. Sulfur-oxidizing bacteria belong to both the ε- and β-proteobacteria; half of the bacteria within the chemocline are either ε-proteobacteria (∼40%) or β-proteobacteria (∼11%), providing a possible clue to the phylogeny of chemoautotrophs and a link to the production of chemoautotrophic biomarkers. We thus demonstrate an association between the presence and activity of sulfur-utilizing chemoautotrophs and occurrence of mid-chain methoxylated FAs within the chemocline of the Cariaco Basin.

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