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Thus far we mostly looked at the core-lipid part (traditional biomarker) of a lipid. what is an IPL?Intact polar lipid, forms main constituent of cell mebranes in most organsims. It is the whole molecule as it occurs in the cell with polar headgroup attached. Large sturctureal variety. they are labile compounds that degrade rapidly upan cell death (hours to days, but can be perserved better (geological time scales) in optimal and anoic conditoins).
IPLs are widely used asbiomarkers for living microbial cells
Traditionally analysed throughseperating dead biomass lipids from IPLS and then extracting core lipids from IPLs unde rlab conditions (taking off the polar headgroup) - losing information :(
alternative modern techniqueDirectly analyse the IPL using LC-MS (liquid chrom. mass spec) or ESI-MS (electrospray ionization mass spectrometry). No separation of the polar headgroup and core lipids – the LC-MS can analyse IPL and core lipids and you can differentiate from the two in the resulting MS. However, qunaitifcation is difficult.
When analysing organic matter with IPLs they are assumed to come from living biomass and can signifya (recent) turnover inmicrobial community compared to the dead biomass core lipids
IPL counts should be highest where .... is highestchlorophyll - biomass is highest, bloom max
- Algae and/or bacteria can synthesize non-phospholipids to accommodate ...phosphor limitation (no phosphor in headgroup)
If you synthesise sulphur over phosphor, you are competitive when nutrients are ... Who does this?low - cyanobacteria
Microbes may switch to sulphur, nitrogen, or sugar lipids at ...P-limitation
ladderane lipids (staircase structure) ar biomarkers for ...anammox (anaerobic ammonium oxidation)
If you wan tto know where anammox is active and not where it WAS active you have to analyse ladderane IPLs, here the laderanne is found in the ...ladderane as the tail/corelipid
We can correlate DNA and IPL abbundances because ..they are both representative of the current environement. Turnover rate is too fast for corelipid (fossil) vs DNA
Heterocyst glycolipids are biomarkers forheterocyst cyanobacteria and N-2 fixation (they look a bit like IPLs)
C5 glycolipids occur inlake and soil environemnt, fresh water system
C6 glycolipids occur insalty (open)marine environments
Why is the headgroup of glycolipids still intact in ancient sediments?Sugar is slightly stronger attached to the long chain – ether bond in glycolipid (degrades slow) vs. ester bond in IPL (degrades fast)
IPLs are great, but don’t work with glycosidic ether lipids as they degrade very slowly - give a reason whythey dont represent the modern environement anymore, but could also signify an older commmunity
Untargeted analysis (‘lipidomics’) reveals enormous diversity in intact polar lipids in the environment, butit is a very complex and large set of data
Global ocean lipidomes show a universal relationship between temperature and lipid unsaturation, where ...increasing temperatures = fewer double bonds -> saturation increases with temperature
Because unsaturation decreases with climate change this will result inLess omega fatty acids, influencing diets
Head group diversity is large and phospholipids are not really dominant in the different environmentsaparently we just need to know this so read it hahah