Identification of the Sulfolipids in the Non-photosynthetic Diatom Nitzschia Alba
Overview
Biophysics
Authors
Affiliations
The four major sulfolipids in the non-photosynthetic marine diatom, Nitzschia alba, were isolated in pure form and their structures were established spectrometrically and by identification of their hydrolysis products as (a) 24-methylene cholesterol sulfate, (b) 1-deoxyceramide-1-sulfonate, (c) phosphatidyl sulfocholine (a sulfonium analogue of phosphatidylcholine) and (d) sulfoquinovosyl diglyceride. The major characteristic fatty acids of the sulfolipids were: for the deoxyceramide sulfonate, 16 : 0 (26%) and 16 : 1-delta3-trans (64%); for the sulfonium analogue, 14 : 0 (30%), 18 : 1 (12%), 18 : 2 (8%), 20 : 5 (27%) and 22 : 6 (4%); and for the sulfoquinovosyl diglyceride (two species, respectively), 14 : 0 (9%, 22%), 16 : 0 (16%, 28%), 18 : 1 (8%, 22%), 20 : 5 (42%, 23%) and 22 : 6 (14%, 2%). Traces of lyso-derivatives of sulfoquinovosyl diglyceride and phosphatidyl sulfocholine were also detected. The deoxyceramide sulfonate and the phosphatidyl sulfocholine represent novel membrane lipid components not previously detected in other organisms. They may however have a widespread distribution in marine diatoms and perhaps in marine organisms generally.
Lipidomic analysis of moss species and under cold stress.
Lu Y, Eiriksson F, Thorsteinsdottir M, Simonsen H Plant Environ Interact. 2023; 3(6):254-263.
PMID: 37284430 PMC: 10168071. DOI: 10.1002/pei3.10095.
Ceramide channel: Structural basis for selective membrane targeting.
Perera M, Ganesan V, Siskind L, Szulc Z, Bielawska A, Bittman R Chem Phys Lipids. 2015; 194:110-116.
PMID: 26408265 PMC: 4718829. DOI: 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2015.09.007.
Low-Molecular-Weight Metabolites from Diatoms: Structures, Biological Roles and Biosynthesis.
Stonik V, Stonik I Mar Drugs. 2015; 13(6):3672-709.
PMID: 26065408 PMC: 4483651. DOI: 10.3390/md13063672.
Inverse-phosphocholine lipids: a remix of a common phospholipid.
Perttu E, Kohli A, Szoka Jr F J Am Chem Soc. 2012; 134(10):4485-8.
PMID: 22364493 PMC: 3303984. DOI: 10.1021/ja210989h.
Lepetit B, Volke D, Gilbert M, Wilhelm C, Goss R Plant Physiol. 2010; 154(4):1905-20.
PMID: 20935178 PMC: 2996015. DOI: 10.1104/pp.110.166454.