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1.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 78(5): 1480-90, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22226949

ABSTRACT

There is great interest in the membrane lipids of archaea (glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers [GDGTs]) as tracers of archaeal biomass because of their utility as paleoproxies and because of the biogeochemical importance of archaea. While core GDGTs (formed by hydrolysis of polar head groups of intact GDGTs after cell death) are appropriate for paleostudies, they have also been used to trace archaeal populations. Also, despite the small size (0.2 by 0.7 µm) of cultivated marine archaea, 0.7-µm glass-fiber filters (GFFs) are typically used to collect GDGTs from natural waters. We quantified both core and intact GDGTs in free-living (0.2- to 0.7-µm), suspended (0.7- to 60-µm), and aggregate (>60-µm) particle size fractions in Puget Sound (Washington State). On average, the free-living fraction contained 36% of total GDGTs, 90% of which were intact. The intermediate-size fraction contained 62% of GDGTs, and 29% of these were intact. The aggregate fraction contained 2% of the total GDGT pool, and 29% of these were intact. Our results demonstrate that intact GDGTs are largely in the free-living fraction. Because only intact GDGTs are present in living cells, protocols that target this size fraction and analyze the intact GDGT pool are necessary to track living populations in marine waters. Core GDGT enrichment in larger-size fractions indicates that archaeal biomass may quickly become attached or entrained in particles once the archaea are dead or dying. While the concentrations of the two pools were generally not correlated, the similar sizes of the core and intact GDGT pools suggest that core GDGTs are removed from the water column on timescales similar to those of cell replication, on timescales of days to weeks.


Subject(s)
Archaea/chemistry , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Diglycerides/analysis , Membrane Lipids/analysis , Archaea/isolation & purification , Washington , Water Microbiology
2.
J Nat Prod ; 73(4): 536-40, 2010 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20218657

ABSTRACT

Florida red tides occur as the result of blooms of the marine dinoflagellate Karenia brevis. K. brevis is known to produce several families of fused polyether ladder compounds. The most notable compounds are the brevetoxins, potent neurotoxins that activate mammalian sodium channels. Additional fused polyether ladder compounds produced by K. brevis include brevenal, brevisin, and hemibrevetoxin B, all with varying affinities for the same binding site on voltage-sensitive sodium channels. The structure elucidation and biological activity of two additional fused polyether ladder compounds containing seven fused ether rings will be described in this paper. Tamulamide A (MW = 638.30) and tamulamide B (MW = 624.29) were isolated from K. brevis cultures, and their structures elucidated using a combination of NMR spectroscopy and high-resolution mass spectrometry. Tamulamides A and B were both found to compete with tritiated brevetoxin-3 ([(3)H]-PbTx-3) for its binding site on rat brain synaptosomes. However, unlike the brevetoxins, tamulamides A and B showed no toxicity to fish at doses up to 200 nM and did not cause significant bronchoconstriction in sheep pulmonary assays.


Subject(s)
Dinoflagellida/chemistry , Ethers, Cyclic/isolation & purification , Marine Toxins/isolation & purification , Oxocins/isolation & purification , Polycyclic Compounds/isolation & purification , Animals , Cyprinodontiformes , Ethers, Cyclic/chemistry , Marine Biology , Marine Toxins/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Oxocins/chemistry , Polycyclic Compounds/chemistry , Rats , Sheep
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