Aib and Iva in the Biosphere: Neither Rare nor Necessarily Extraterrestrial

Abstract magnified image Fourty‐nine species and strains of filamentous fungi of the genera Acremonium, Bionectria, Clonostachys, Emericellopsis, Hypocrea/Trichoderma, Lecythophora, Monocillium, Nectriopsis, Niesslia, Tolypocladium , and Wardomyces , deposited with the culture collection of the Cent...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chemistry & Biodiversity
Main Authors: Brückner, Hans, Becker, Dieter, Gams, Walter, Degenkolb, Thomas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2009
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200800331
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fcbdv.200800331
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/cbdv.200800331
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Summary:Abstract magnified image Fourty‐nine species and strains of filamentous fungi of the genera Acremonium, Bionectria, Clonostachys, Emericellopsis, Hypocrea/Trichoderma, Lecythophora, Monocillium, Nectriopsis, Niesslia, Tolypocladium , and Wardomyces , deposited with the culture collection of the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures (CBS) in Utrecht, The Netherlands, were grown on nutrient agar plates. Organic extracts of mycelia were analyzed after acidic total hydrolysis and derivatization by GC/SIM‐MS on Chirasil ‐ L ‐Val for the presence of Aib (= α ‐aminoisobutyric acid, 2‐methylalanine) and dl ‐Iva (=isovaline, 2‐ethylalanine). In 37 of the hydrolysates, Aib was detected, and in several of them D ‐Iva or mixtures of D ‐ and L ‐Iva. Non‐proteinogenic Aib, in particular, is a highly specific marker for a distinctive group of fungal polypeptides named peptaibols or, comprehensively, peptaibiotics , i.e. , pept ides containing Aib and displaying (anti)b iotic activities. The biotic synthesis of these amino acids by filamentous fungi contradicts the still widespread belief that α , α ‐dialkyl‐ α ‐amino acids do not or rarely occur in the biosphere and, if detected, are of extraterrestrial origin. The abundant production of peptaibiotics by cosmopolitan species of microfungi has also to be considered in the discussion on the occurrence of Aib and Iva in ancient and recent sediments. The detection of trace amounts of Aib in ice samples of Antarctica that are devoid of meteorites might also be related to the presence of Aib‐producing microorganisms, being either indigenous psychrophiles, or being transported and localized by mechanisms related to bioaerosols and cryoconites. The presence of microfungi being capable of producing α , α ‐dialkyl α ‐amino acids in terrestrial samples, and possible contamination of extraterrestrial materials are pointed out to be of relevance for the reliable interpretation of cosmogeochemical data.