Published October 27, 2025 | Version v2
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Substantial contribution of in-situ produced bacterial sphingolipids to the sedimentary lipidome

Description

Abstract: The sedimentary lipid pool comprises a myriad of components with some specific biomarkers used in paleoclimatic and geobiological reconstructions. However, a comprehensive view of the sedimentary lipidome is lacking. Here we conduct an untargeted analysis of the Black Sea sedimentary lipidome using high resolution mass spectrometry. Besides commonly reported phytoplankton-derived fossil lipids originate from oxic surface water, a diverse and abundant set of sphingolipids, accounting for ~20% of the lipidome, was discovered. These sphingolipids are produced in-situ by sedimentary anaerobic bacteria, likely in place of phospholipids due to the deficiency of phosphate in anoxic sediments. Our results suggest that while phytoplankton-derived lipids contribute 50–60% of the sedimentary lipidome, the importance of bacterial lipids, particularly in-situ produced sphingolipids, has been overlooked.

Source data:

Data 1. Spt_hits.and.backbone_sequences.MAFFT-L-INS-i.msa

Data 2. Spt_hits.and.backbone_sequences.MAFFT-L-INS-i.msa.trimAl

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Additional details

Dates

Created
2024-11-22