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1.
Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria have the unique ability to synthesize fatty acids containing linearly concatenated cyclobutane rings, termed “ladderane lipids.” In this study we investigated the effect of temperature on the ladderane lipid composition and distribution in anammox enrichment cultures, marine particulate organic matter, and surface sediments. Under controlled laboratory conditions we observed an increase in the amount of C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids compared with the amount of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids with increasing temperature and also an increase in the amount of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids compared with the amount of C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids with decreasing temperature. Combining these data with results from the natural environment showed a significant (R2 = 0.85, P = <0.0001, n = 121) positive sigmoidal relationship between the amounts of C18 and C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids and the in situ temperature; i.e., there is an increase in the relative abundance of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids at lower temperatures and vice versa, particularly at temperatures between 12°C and 20°C. Novel shorter (C16) and longer (C22 to C24) ladderane fatty acids were also identified, but their relative amounts were small and did not change with temperature. The adaptation of ladderane fatty acid chain length to temperature changes is similar to the regulation of common fatty acid composition in other bacteria and may be the result of maintaining constant membrane fluidity under different temperature regimens (homeoviscous adaptation). Our results can potentially be used to discriminate between the origins of ladderane lipids in marine sediments, i.e., to determine if ladderanes are produced in situ in relatively cold surface sediments or if they are fossil remnants originating from the warmer upper water column.Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria possess the unique ability to oxidize NH4+ with NO2 to N2 under anoxic conditions (42). Since the discovery of the anammox process in a wastewater treatment plant in the Netherlands (21), studies have indicated that anammox bacteria are omnipresent in low-oxygen environments around the world. Anammox therefore forms an important link in both the oceanic (4, 7, 17, 18, 31) and freshwater (14, 33) nitrogen cycles. Unlike other Planctomycetes, anammox bacteria contain a unique “organelle” called the anammoxosome (19, 37, 44-46). The membrane of this compartment contains unusual “ladderane” lipids (37). The core ladderane lipids consist of C18 and C20 fatty acids containing either 3 or 5 linearly concatenated cyclobutane rings, which are ester bound to a glycerol backbone or ether bound as alkyl chains (35). In addition, the intact polar lipids containing the core lipid structures may have different types of polar head groups, including phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), or phosphatidylglycerol (PG) (1, 22). In silico density simulation modeling experiments with a ladderane lipid-containing membrane (glycerol-bound mixed ether-ester containing both ladderane moieties) have indicated that ladderane lipids could provide a denser cell membrane than conventional membrane lipids (37). Since the anammoxosome appears to be impenetrable to fluorophores, the ladderane membrane could function in cell energy conservation (37, 44).Experimental evidence has shown that anammox bacteria isolated from wastewater treatment reactors grow over a wide range of temperatures (20 to 43°C) and have an optimum temperature of about 35°C (39). In the natural environment the anammox process has been reported to occur at temperatures as low as −2.5°C in sea ice (5, 26) and as high as 70°C in hot springs and hydrothermal vent areas (3, 12). Furthermore, “Candidatus Scalindua spp.” has been successfully enriched from marine sediment (Gullmarsfjord, Sweden) in sequencing batch reactors at temperatures of 15 and 20°C (43). In other bacteria containing common fatty acids temperature adaptation can be achieved by (among other things) modifying the composition of the membrane bilayers to deal with alterations in membrane viscosity due to changes in temperature. This process has been well documented and is termed “homeoviscous adaptation”; i.e., the fatty acid composition is changed to maintain membrane fluidity (23, 27, 34, 40). Currently, it is not known how anammox bacteria, with their highly unusual ladderane lipids, react to temperature. To investigate this, we analyzed the ladderane lipid composition of anammox bacteria grown at different temperatures in sequencing batch reactors and in samples from different natural environments covering a wide range of temperatures.  相似文献   

2.
Oo KC  Stumpf PK 《Plant physiology》1983,73(4):1033-1037
The metabolism of 14C-labeled fatty acids and triacylglycerols was followed in intact germinating oil palm seedlings as well as in tissue slices. In the germinating seedling, the shoot contained a normal pattern of membrane fatty acids (mainly C16, C18:1, C18:2) but the kernel contained about 68% C12 and C14 fatty acids. Haustorium fatty acids were intermediate between the two. [14C]Acetate was actively metabolized by shoot and haustorium slices but not so actively by the kernel. Approximately 9% to 17% was converted to water-soluble substances, 4% to 6% to CO2, and 0.5% to 5.9% to lipids. The fatty acids synthesized in the shoot and haustorium were mainly C16, C18, and C18:1 fatty acids but in the kernel about 18% to 32% of the 14C-fatty acids were C12 fatty acids.

[14C]Lauric acid was absorbed and metabolized by haustorium slices and by the haustorium in intact seedlings; it was partly esterified to triacylglycerols and also converted to water-soluble substances and insoluble tissue material. In contrast, tri-[14C]laurin was absorbed but not metabolized. The haustorium also absorbed other fatty acids but the longer chain (C16 and C18) fatty acids were not esterified or metabolized further. Preincubation of the haustorium with plant hormones or in the presence of kernel tissue did not alter its inactivity towards tri-[14C]laurin.

When tri-[14C]laurin or [14C]lauric acid were injected into the seed or the shoot, there was no movement or radioactivity to other parts of the seedling. When injected into the shoot, but not into the seed, tri-[14C] laurin was hydrolyzed and partly metabolized to water-soluble substances.

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3.
Suberin from the roots of carrots (Daucus carota), parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), rutabaga (Brassica napobrassica), turnip (Brassica rapa), red beet (Beta vulgaris), and sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) was isolated by a combination of chemical and enzymatic techniques. Finely powdered suberin was depolymerized with 14% BF3 in methanol, and soluble monomers (20-50% of suberin) were fractionated into phenolic (<10%) and aliphatic (13-35%) fractions. The aliphatic fractions consisted mainly of ω-hydroxyacids (29-43%), dicarboxylic acids (16-27%), fatty acids (4-18%), and fatty alcohols (3-6%). Each fraction was subjected to combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Among the fatty acids very long chain acids (>C20) were the dominant components in all six plants. In the alcohol fraction C18, C20, C22, and C24 saturated primary alcohols were the major components. C16 and C18 dicarboxylic acids were the major dicarboxylic acids of the suberin of all six plants and in all cases octadec-9-ene-1, 18-dioic acid was the major component except in rutabaga where hexadecane-1, 16-dioic acid was the major dicarboxylic acid. The composition of the ω-hydroxyacid fraction was quite similar to that of the dicarboxylic acids; 18-hydroxy-octadec-9-enoic acid was the major component in all plants except rutabaga, where equal quantities of 16-hydroxyhexadecanoic acid and 18-hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid (42% each) were found. Compounds which would be derived from 18-hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid and octadec-9-ene-1, 18-dioic acid by epoxidation, and epoxidation followed by hydration of the epoxide, were also detected in most of the suberin samples. The monomer composition of the six plants showed general similarities but quite clear taxonomic differences.  相似文献   

4.
Elongation of fatty acids by microsomal fractions obtained from leek epidermal cells was measured by the incorporation of [1-14C]stearate, [1-14C]stearyl CoA, and [1-14C]stearyl ACP in the presence of malonyl CoA and NADPH. Stearoyl CoA appears to be the primer of the elongase (s) rather than stearoyl ACP. There are at least two elongases, the first elongating C18 to C20, the second synthesizing C22 to C30 fatty acids from C20. The main site of the elongase (s) is a subcellular fraction enriched in endoplasmic reticulum. The plasma membrane-enriched fraction, which contains large amounts of saturated very long chain fatty acids, synthesizes only minor amounts of them.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Successful induction of callus from coconut endosperm was achieved by using the tissue situated near the micropylar end of a young fruit. For initiation of callus, a high concentration of auxin (20 to 100 ppm) was added to the basal medium containing activated charcoal. Subcultured callus showed a 40-fold increase during culture of three months. Based on the analysis of fatty acid composition, the maturation of endosperm was characterized by an increase in short chain fatty acids (C8, C10, C12, C14)and a decrease in long chain fatty acids (C16, C18: 1, C18: 2). In developing endosperms, proportion of short chain fatty acids was higher in lipids of the antipodal than those of other regions. In the final stage of maturation, around 82% of total fatty acids was short chain fatty acids, while the proportion of long chain fatty acids decreased up to 16%. The fatty acid composition of callus subcultured for six months was comparable to that of the immature endosperm. Lipids were accumulated in callus as globular bodies.  相似文献   

6.
Long chain fatty acid synthesis was studied using etiolated leek seedling microsomes. In the presence of ATP, [2-14C]malonyl-CoA was incorporated into fatty acids of C16C26. The omission of ATP, even in the presence of acetyl-CoA, led to a complete loss of activity, which was restored by addition of exogeneous acyl-CoAs. Comparison of acyl-CoA (C12C24) elongation showed that stearoyl-CoA, in the presence of [2-14C]malonyl-CoA, was the more efficient precursor leading to the formation of fatty acids having a chain length of C20C26. [1-14C]C16CoA and [1-14C]C18CoA were elongated in the presence of malonyl-CoA, without degradation of the acyl chain. The time-course and the malonyl-CoA concentration curves showed that [1-14C]C18CoA was a better primer than [1-14C]C16CoA. Acyl-CoA elongation was also studied over the concentration range 4.5–45 μM [1-14C]C18CoA. Comparison of the radioactivity incorporated into the fatty acids formed using [2-14C]malonyl-CoA in the presence of C18CoA, on the one hand, and [1-14C]C18CoA in the presence of malonyl-CoA, on the other, demonstrated clearly that the acyl chain of the acyl-CoA was elongated by malonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

7.
2-(±)-Cyclopentenecarboxylic acid added to the culture medium is incorporated into two new fatty acids by the growing cells of Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 7059). The new fatty acids, amounting to 24% of the total cellular fatty acids, are identified as hydrocarpic [11-(2′-cyclopentenyl)-hendecanoic] and chaulmoogric [13-(2′-cyclopentenyl)-tridecanoic] by gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. These C16 and C18 fatty acids are optically active, levorotatory, with the specific rotation of ?50.4° as mixture, thus the optical purity of approximately 80%. This indicates that the optical rotation of these bacterial fatty acids are opposite with that of the fatty acids from plant oils.  相似文献   

8.
The synthesis of fatty acids and lipids in Nannochloropsis sp. was investigated by labeling cells in vivo with [14C]-bicarbonate or [14C]-acetate. [14C]-bicarbonate was incorporated to the greatest extent into 16:0, 16:1, and 14:0 fatty acids, which are the predominant fatty acids of triacylglycerols. However, more than half of the [14C]-acetate was incorporated into longer and more desaturated fatty acids, which are constituents of membrane lipids. [14C]-acetate was incorporated most strongly into phosphatidylcholine, which rapidly lost label during a 5-h chase period. The label associated with phosphatidylethanolamine also decreased during the chase period, whereas label in other membrane lipids and triacylglycerol increased. The dynamics of labeling, along with information regarding the acyl compositions of various lipids, suggests that 1) the primary products of chloroplast fatty acid synthesis are 14:0, 16:0, and 16:1; 2) C20 fatty acids are formed by an elongation reaction that can utilize externally supplied acetate; 3) phosphatidylcholine is a site for desaturation of C18 fatty acids; and 4) phosphatidylethanolamine may be a site for desaturation of C20 fatty acids.  相似文献   

9.
Lipids from rat Harderian glands were extracted with ethyl acetate, hydrolysed with base and examined by gas chromatography (GC) and gas chromatography—mass spectrometry (GC—MS) as trimethylsilyl (TMS), [2H9]TMS, methyl ester—TMS, picolinyl, nicotinate and nicotinylidene derivatives. The latter three derivatives were used to reveal the structures of the alkyl chains of fatty acids, alcohols and glycerol ethers, respectively. Forty-eight compounds were identified, representing about 97% of the total extracted lipids as measured by GC peak areas. The major constituents were fatty acids with chain lengths from 12 to 22 carbon atoms (mainly C18 and C20) and fatty alcohols (C16 to C26) derived from wax esters. Most of these acids and alcohols were unsaturated in the ω-7 position and were accompanied by smaller amounts of the saturated and ω-5 monounsaturated analogues. Glycerol ethers were also identified for the first time in this secretion; the ether chains contained from 14 to 19 carbon atoms (mainly 16) and were straight-chain saturated, unsaturated (ω-5 and ω-7) and branched (iso). The only sterol found was cholesterol amounting to 1.24% of the total extract.  相似文献   

10.
《Phytochemistry》1987,26(12):3265-3268
Seven species of fresh mangrove leaves were found to contain saturated normal and branched chain hydrocarbons, mostly between C16 and C36 with both odd and even carbon numbers. Significant quantitative variations were found between species. Wax esters were found to contain fatty acids with chain lengths between C12 and C22. Palmitic (16:0) and stearic (18:0) acids were the major component saturated fatty acids, whereas, oleic (18:1) and linolenic (18:3) acids were the major unsaturate α-acids. Chain lengths of the alcohols of wax esters were between C14 and C36. Significant quantitative and minor qualitative differences were noted in the alcohol composition of wax esters. Hydrocarbon and wax ester compositions were characterised by the presence of low M, components in high proportions.  相似文献   

11.
Pinarosa Avato 《Planta》1984,162(6):487-494
Experimental evidence for a membranebound microsomal ester synthetase from Bonus barley primary leaves is reported. The results are consistent with at least two mechanisms for the synthesis of barley wax esters: an acyl-CoA-fattyalcohol-transacylase-type reaction and an apparent direct esterification of alcohols with fatty acids. Biosynthesis of wax esters was not specific with regard to the chain length of the tested alcohols. The microsomal preparation readily catalyzed the esterification of C16-, C18-, C22- or C24-labelled alcohols with fatty acids of endogenous origin. Exogenous long-chain alcohols were exclusively incorporated into the alkyl moieties of the esters. Addition of ATP, CoA and-or free fatty acids was not effective in stimulating or depressing the esterifying activity of the microsomal fraction. Partial solubilization of the ester synthetase was obtained using phosphate-buffered saline.Abbreviations P pellet - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - S supernatant - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate  相似文献   

12.
Sodium [1-14C]acetate and [1-14C]stearic acid were readily incorporated into hydrocarbons, secondary alcohols, wax esters, aldehydes, primary alcohols, and fatty acids in young pea leaves (Pisum sativum). Dithioerythritol, dithiothreitol, and mercaptoethanol (but not glutathione and cysteine) severely inhibited the incorporation of labeled acetate into alkanes and secondary alcohols with accumulation of label in wax ester and aldehyde fractions. Detailed radio gas-chromatographic analyses of the fatty acids of both the surface lipid components and internal lipids showed that dithioerythritol and mercaptoethanol specifically inhibited n-hentriacontane (C31) synthesis and caused accumulation of C32 aldehyde, suggesting that the inhibition was at or near the terminal step in alkane biosynthesis, presumably decarboxylation. Trichloroacetate, at a concentration that inhibited C31 alkane synthesis but not the synthesis of alcohols (C26 and C28) specifically inhibited the formation of C32 aldehyde but not that of the C26 or C28 aldehyde. From these results, it is concluded that the C32 aldehyde is derived from the C32 acyl derivative which is the precursor of C31 alkane.  相似文献   

13.
Positional and geometric isomers of mono-, di- and tri-unsaturated fatty acids containing 18 carbon atoms were separated on commercially available reversed-phase columns in gradient systems composed of acetonitrile and water, utilizing photodiode array detection. The biological samples were hydrolyzed with 2 M NaOH for 35–40 min at 85–90°C. After cooling, the hydrolysates were acidified with 4 M HCl and the free fatty acids were extracted with dichloromethane. The organic solvent was removed in a gentle stream of argon. The fatty acids were determined after pre-column derivatization with dibromacetophenone in the presence of triethylamine. The reaction components were mixed and reacted for 2 h at 50°C. Separations of derivatized fatty acids were performed on two C18 columns (Nova Pak C18, 4 μm, 250×4.6 mm, Waters) by binary or ternate gradient programs and UV detection at 254 and 235 nm. The geometric and positional isomers of some unsaturated fatty acids were substantially retained on the C18 columns and were distinct from some saturated fatty acids, endogenous substances in biological samples or background interference. Only slight separation of critical pairs of cis-9 C18:1/cis-11 C18:1 and cis-6 C18:1/trans-11 C18:1 was obtained. A ternate gradient program can be used for complete fractionation of a mixture of conjugated linoleic acid isomers (CLA) from cis-9, cis-12 and trans-9, trans-12 isomers of C18:2. The CLA isomers in the effluent were monitored at 235 nm. The CLA isomers were differentiated from saturated and unsaturated fatty acids using a photodiode array detector. The utility of the method was demonstrated by evaluating the fatty acid composition of duodenal digesta, rapeseed and maize oils.  相似文献   

14.
Microsomal particles from dark-grown Euglena gracilis incorporated malonyl-CoA into fatty acids and fatty alcohols in the presence of acetyl-CoA, NADH, NADPH, and ATP with an optimum pH of 8.0. Schmidt degradation of the individual fatty acids derived from [l,3-14C]malonyl-CoA showed that the microsomal fatty acid synthesis was a de novo type. Detailed analysis of the products formed in the absence of various cofactors showed that the role of ATP was specifically in the formation of fatty alcohols and that fatty acid reduction specifically required NADH.The major aliphatic chains synthesized by the microsomes were C16, C18, and C14 in both the acyl portions and alcohols. Although relative concentrations of acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA influenced the chain length distribution of products, C16remained the major product in both the alcohol and the acid fractions. Effects of NADPH and NADH concentrations on malonyl-CoA incorporation suggested that the two reductive steps involved in the microsomal fatty acid synthesis have different pyridine nucleotide specificity. The apparent Km for malonyl-CoA was 4.2 × 10?4m. Based on the experimental results a mechanism is suggested by which carbon is channeled into wax esters under conditions of nutritional abundance in dark-grown E. gracilis.  相似文献   

15.
16.
This is the first report devoted to study of the hydrocarbon composition of the extract of buds of European birch Betula pendula (family Betulacea). We have identified saturated (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms) and unsaturated (linoleic and linolenic) fatty acids, β-caryophyllene, α-humulene, and the components of epicuticular waxes of cover scales, such as n-alkanes (C21 to C26), esters of fatty acids (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms), and fatty alcohols (C18 to C30, even number of carbon atoms). The gas chromatographic retention indices of all identified compounds have been determined.  相似文献   

17.
This is the first report devoted to study of the hydrocarbon composition of the extract of buds of European birch Betula pendula (family Betulacea). We have identified saturated (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms) and unsaturated (linoleic and linolenic) fatty acids, β-caryophyllene, α-humulene, and the components of epicuticular waxes of cover scales, such as n-alkanes (C21 to C26), esters of fatty acids (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms), and fatty alcohols (C18 to C30, even number of carbon atoms). The gas chromatographic retention indices of all identified compounds have been determined.  相似文献   

18.
A detailed chemical analysis of the benzene extract of western white pine bark was conducted. The extract consisted of 13% phlobaphenes, 18% strong acids, 21% polar weak acids, 6.5% fatty acids, 9.5% resin acids, and 32% neutrals. The fatty acids consisted mainly of C20:0, C22:0, and C24:0 acids. The resin acids were identified as: isopimaric, anticopalic, dehydroabietic, sandaracopimaric, abietic, 6,8,11,13-abietatetraen-18-oic and pimaric acids. The neutrals on saponification gave fatty acids, sterols, wax alcohols, nonsaponifiables, and other components. The esterified fatty acids consisted primarily of the C16:0, C18:0, C20:0 and C24:0 acids. The sterols included major amounts of sitosterol, campesterol, and stigmasterol, and traces of cholesterol. Over 70 individual compounds were isolated and identified from the nonsaponifiables. These included borneol, sesquiterpenes, diterpenes, steroidal ketones, as well as lanostane and serratane triterpenes. The characterization of12 new natural products or natural products isolated for the first time from Pinus species is reported.  相似文献   

19.
Michel Rossignol 《Phytochemistry》1976,15(12):1893-1896
fatty acids containing 10 to 22 carbons have been found in the whole root of 20 plant species; C16 and C18 acids are the more abundant ones. All common phospholipids are present; the most frequent are phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. A relationship is suggested between the complexity of the lipid composition and phylogeny. Species which exhibit very poor tolerance to high-lime soils seem to contain more saturated fatty acids than species which do not become chlorotic under the same conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Despite their importance in marine and freshwater microalgal assemblages, cold-adapted dinoflagellates have been the subject of few comprehensive lipid studies, particularly with respect to those lipids that comprise plastid membranes. In an effort to understand the differences between warm- and cold-adapted dinoflagellate glycolipid composition, four peridinin-containing, cold-adapted dinoflagellates were surveyed for intact forms of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG), two common plastid lipids, using positive-ion electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry (ESI/MS) and electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (ESI/MS/MS). It was determined that the dominant forms of MGDG and DGDG in these cold-adapted, peridinin-containing dinoflagellates possessed C18 fatty acids and did not, with the exception of a 20:5/18:5 form of DGDG in a cold-adapted Gymnodinium sp. from the Baltic Sea, have C20 fatty acids. This finding is in contrast to an earlier study of 35 peridinin-containing, warm-adapted dinoflagellates, which discovered a cluster dominated by C18 fatty acids and a cluster dominated by both C20 and C18 fatty acids. The key difference in MGDG and DGDG production between the former group and the cold-adapted dinoflagellates examined in this study is that the cold-adapted species’ DGDG fatty acids were less saturated. Each cold-adapted dinoflagellate possessed both 18:5/18:5 and 18:5/18:4 DGDG, while most of the warm-adapted dinoflagellates contained only 18:5/18:4 DGDG. This survey also revealed the presence of a putative 18:1/14:0 trigalactosyldiacylglycerol (TGDG) as a dominant glycolipid in Gymnodinium sp. TGDG, previously unreported in dinoflagellates, was also discovered in Gymnodinium sp. in the forms of 18:1/16:0 and 18:1/18:1 TGDG, as minor lipids. Since the fatty acids associated with TGDG are not those found with dominant forms of MGDG or DGDG, TGDG may be produced by a different biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

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