Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Redox-Related Metabolic Dynamics Imprinted On Short-Chain Carboxylic Acids In Soil Water Extracts: A C-13-Exometabolomics Analysis

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY LETTERS(2021)

Cited 4|Views0
No score
Abstract
Soil microbial metabolism is critical to carbon cycling, but direct annotation of metabolic activities is challenging. Here, we present an exometabolomics approach coupled with C-13 profiling for in situ probing of metabolic activities following a C-13-glucose pulse in oxic or anoxic soil incubations. In the soil water extracts, we monitored both abundance and isotopic enrichment of short-chain carboxylic acids (SCCAs) involved in different metabolic pathways: peripheral sugar oxidation, glycolysis, fermentation, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The water-extractable SCCAs captured redox-dependent metabolic dynamics. First, under both redox conditions, increased concentration (up to 50 mu M) along with near-complete C-13-labeled fractions for both gluconate and 2-ketogluconate revealed activation of the peripheral sugar oxidation pathway. Second, greater citrate depletion during the oxic condition than during the anoxic condition (6.2 versus 2.3 mu M) was consistent with an expected decrease in carbon usage in the anoxic incubations. Third, accumulation of C-13-labeled succinate and malate only in the anoxic incubations demonstrated metabolic overflow typical of anaerobic metabolism. Fourth, production of C-13-labeled lactate under the anoxic conditions highlighted glucose fermentation but, under the oxic conditions, lactate depletion implied its role as a carbon source. Such C-13-assisted exometabolomics data offer insights to interpret gene-based predictions of metabolic potentials.
More
Translated text
Key words
metabolic dynamics imprinted,soil water extracts,redox-related,short-chain,c-exometabolomics
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined