Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments

Intact polar membrane lipids (IPLs) are the building blocks of all cell membranes. There is a wide range of phosphorus-free IPL structures, including amino acid containing IPLs, that can be taxonomically specific. Trimethylornithine membrane lipids (TMOs) were discovered in northern wetland Planctom...

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Published in:Metabolites
Main Author: Eli K. Moore
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2218-1989/11/1/49/ 2023-08-20T04:10:14+02:00 Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments Eli K. Moore 2021-01-12 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Lipid Metabolism https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Metabolites; Volume 11; Issue 1; Pages: 49 trimethylornithine intact polar lipids cell membrane Planctomycetes northern wetlands Text 2021 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049 2023-08-01T00:50:59Z Intact polar membrane lipids (IPLs) are the building blocks of all cell membranes. There is a wide range of phosphorus-free IPL structures, including amino acid containing IPLs, that can be taxonomically specific. Trimethylornithine membrane lipids (TMOs) were discovered in northern wetland Planctomycete species that were isolated and described in the last decade. The trimethylated terminal nitrogen moiety of the ornithine amino acid in the TMO structure gives the lipid a charged polar head group, similar to certain phospholipids. Since their discovery, TMOs have been identified in various other recently described northern latitude Planctomycete species, and in diverse environments including tundra soil, a boreal eutrophic lake, meso-oligotrophic lakes, and hot springs. The majority of environments or enrichment cultures in which TMOs have been observed include predominately heterotrophic microbial communities involved in the degradation of recalcitrant material and/or low oxygen methanogenic conditions at primarily northern latitudes. Other ecosystems occupied with microbial communities that possess similar metabolic pathways, such as tropical peatlands or coastal salt marshes, may include TMO producing Planctomycetes as well, further allowing these lipids to potentially be used to understand microbial community responses to environmental change in a wide range of systems. The occurrence of TMOs in hot springs indicates that these unique lipids could have broad environmental distribution with different specialized functions. Opportunities also exist to investigate the application of TMOs in microbiome studies, including forensic necrobiomes. Further environmental and microbiome lipidomics research involving TMOs will help reveal the evolution, functions, and applications of these unique membrane lipids. Text Tundra MDPI Open Access Publishing Metabolites 11 1 49
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic trimethylornithine
intact polar lipids
cell membrane
Planctomycetes
northern wetlands
spellingShingle trimethylornithine
intact polar lipids
cell membrane
Planctomycetes
northern wetlands
Eli K. Moore
Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
topic_facet trimethylornithine
intact polar lipids
cell membrane
Planctomycetes
northern wetlands
description Intact polar membrane lipids (IPLs) are the building blocks of all cell membranes. There is a wide range of phosphorus-free IPL structures, including amino acid containing IPLs, that can be taxonomically specific. Trimethylornithine membrane lipids (TMOs) were discovered in northern wetland Planctomycete species that were isolated and described in the last decade. The trimethylated terminal nitrogen moiety of the ornithine amino acid in the TMO structure gives the lipid a charged polar head group, similar to certain phospholipids. Since their discovery, TMOs have been identified in various other recently described northern latitude Planctomycete species, and in diverse environments including tundra soil, a boreal eutrophic lake, meso-oligotrophic lakes, and hot springs. The majority of environments or enrichment cultures in which TMOs have been observed include predominately heterotrophic microbial communities involved in the degradation of recalcitrant material and/or low oxygen methanogenic conditions at primarily northern latitudes. Other ecosystems occupied with microbial communities that possess similar metabolic pathways, such as tropical peatlands or coastal salt marshes, may include TMO producing Planctomycetes as well, further allowing these lipids to potentially be used to understand microbial community responses to environmental change in a wide range of systems. The occurrence of TMOs in hot springs indicates that these unique lipids could have broad environmental distribution with different specialized functions. Opportunities also exist to investigate the application of TMOs in microbiome studies, including forensic necrobiomes. Further environmental and microbiome lipidomics research involving TMOs will help reveal the evolution, functions, and applications of these unique membrane lipids.
format Text
author Eli K. Moore
author_facet Eli K. Moore
author_sort Eli K. Moore
title Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
title_short Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
title_full Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
title_fullStr Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
title_full_unstemmed Trimethylornithine Membrane Lipids: Discovered in Planctomycetes and Identified in Diverse Environments
title_sort trimethylornithine membrane lipids: discovered in planctomycetes and identified in diverse environments
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_source Metabolites; Volume 11; Issue 1; Pages: 49
op_relation Lipid Metabolism
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11010049
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