| Literature DB >> 26788422 |
Erik Selander1, Jan Heuschele2, Göran M Nylund3, Georg Pohnert4, Henrik Pavia3, Oda Bjærke5, Larisa A Pender-Healy6, Peter Tiselius7, Thomas Kiørboe2.
Abstract
Copepods are ubiquitous in aquatic habitats. They exude bioactive compounds that mediate mate finding or induce defensive traits in prey organisms. However, little is known about the chemical nature of the copepod exometabolome that contributes to the chemical landscape in pelagic habitats. Here we describe the development of a closed loop solid phase extraction setup that allows for extraction of exuded metabolites from live copepods. We captured exudates from male and female Temora longicornis and analyzed the content with high resolution LC-MS. Chemometric methods revealed 87 compounds that constitute a specific chemical pattern either qualitatively or quantitatively indicating copepod presence. The majority of the compounds were present in both female and male exudates, but nine compounds were mainly or exclusively present in female exudates and hence potential pheromone candidates. Copepodamide G, known to induce defensive responses in phytoplankton, was among the ten compounds of highest relative abundance in both male and female extracts. The presence of copepodamide G shows that the method can be used to capture and analyze chemical signals from living source organisms. We conclude that solid phase extraction in combination with metabolic profiling of exudates is a useful tool to develop our understanding of the chemical interplay between pelagic organisms.Entities:
Keywords: Copepod exudate; Exometabolome; Infochemicals; Metabolomics; Temora longicornis
Year: 2016 PMID: 26788422 PMCID: PMC4715450 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Sampling device used to collect exudates from copepods.
Water is drawn through the partially immersed ENV+ and the following C8 SPE before reintroduced into the incubation chamber. The ENV+ column on the outlet end serves to minimize contamination from pump or hosing. The hatched line in the opening of the first SPE column represents a 30 µm nylon plankton mesh that prevents copepods and copepod eggs from entering the column.
Figure 4Differences between male and female exudates compound by compound.
The OPLS-DA loading plots of metabolites exuded from female and male copepods. The loading plot (A) represents the effect and reliability (correlation, p(corr)[1]), and (B) the contribution or magnitude (covariance, p[1]) of each metabolite to class separation. Jack-knifed confidence intervals (95%) in the covariance plot (B) were calculated from cross-validation. Metabolites with high p(corr)[1] and p[1] values are shaded.
Figure 2(A) Representative chromatograms from male exudates (blue), female exudates (red), and copepod free controls (black). Prominent peaks exclusive to copepod samples were always visible after 13 min (compound 10 in Table 2 with a monoisotopic mass of 433.29 Da), enlarged in (B)) as well as at 24–25 min (compounds 58 and 63 in Table 1, monoisotopic mass 563.39 and 640.41 Da, enlarged in (C)). The majority of the 87 compounds detected were, however, too low in concentration to be observed without extracting specific masses.
Metabolites from female and male Temora longicornis.
The two compounds exclusively found in female exudates are indicated in red, and metabolites that are significantly more abundant in females but also present in male exudates in grey.
| No. | RT (min) | Mass | Fold change | Elemental composition with scores |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1.59 | 136.0382 | 0.5 | C5H4N4O (98.0), C4H8O5 (93.6) |
| 2 | 1.70 | 152.0331 | 0.4 | C5H4N4O2 (98.0), C4H8O6 (92.4) |
| 3 | 4.86 | 284.1373 | 0.9 | C13H20N2O5 (99.6), C14H16N6O (93.2), C8H17N10P (91.8) |
| 4 | 6.17 | 304.1495 | 7.4 | C10H20N6O5 (98.9), C11H16N10O (91.8), C12H25N4OPS (91.0) |
| 5 | 6.75 | 264.1473 | 1.6 | C14H20N2O3 (98.8) |
| 6 | 9.34 | 163.0993 | 0.8 | C10H13NO (98.8) |
| 7 | 10.61 | 230.1514 | 1.6 | C12H22O4 (99.0) |
| 8 | 11.88 | 334.2144 | 0.3 | C20H30O4 (99.2), C21H26N4 (92.4), C14H31N4O3P (90.5) |
| 9 | 12.76 | 380.2533 | 1.6 | N/A |
| 10 | 13.08 | 433.2863 | 0.9 | C22H43NO5S (99.1), C23H39N5OS (95.2), C17H40N9PS (95.1) |
| 11 | 13.08 | 505.2166 | 0.9 | C23H39NO7S2 (94.6), C24H43NO2S4 (92.9), C27H41NP2S2 (90.1) |
| 12 | 14.15 | 765.4143 | 1.3 | C36H63NO16 (99.5), C31H60N9O11P (98.5), C34H51N15O6 (98.4) |
| 13 | 14.23 | 362.2431 | 1.7 | C18H30N6O2 (95.5), C19H41P3 (93.9) |
| 14 | 14.97 | 364.2599 | 1.2 | C16H37N4O3P (97.8), C18H32N6O2 (93.7), C22H36O4 (90.1) |
| 15 | 14.98 | 661.1729 | 1.2 | C25H41ClNO13PS (96.1), C30H47ClNOP3S3 (95.7), C20H36O3 (98.3) |
| 16 | 15.20 | 364.2592 | 1.3 | C18H32N6O2 (98.3) |
| 17 | 15.20 | 364.2592 | 1.4 | C18H32N6O2 (98.3), C19H43P3 (94.3), C16H37N4O3P (92.7) |
| 18 | 15.73 | 364.2589 | 1.4 | C18H32N6O2 (97.2), C19H43P3 (94.4) |
| 19 | 16.82 | 174.1042 | 1.7 | N/A |
| 20 | 16.82 | 602.3516 | 2.1 | C33H46N8OS (93.0) |
| 21 | 16.82 | 367.1243 | 1.5 | N/A |
| 22 | 16.82 | 226.1720 | 1.7 | C17H22 (99.0) |
| 23 | 16.82 | 176.1194 | 1.6 | N/A |
| 24 | 16.82 | 312.1701 | 1.9 | C16H20N6O (99.1), C16H28N2S2 (96.6), C13H29O6P (95.3) |
| 25 | 16.82 | 130.0778 | 1.7 | N/A |
| 26 | 16.82 | 272.1775 | 1.8 | C18H24O2 (99.6), C12H25N4OP (91.3) |
| 27 | 16.82 | 134.0725 | 1.6 | N/A |
| 28 | 16.82 | 634.2966 | 2.2 | C38H50O2S3 (96.5), C32H51N4OPS3 (95.8), C30H46N6O5S2 (94.0) |
| 29 | 16.82 | 132.0943 | 1.7 | N/A |
| 30 | 16.82 | 344.1074 | 2.1 | C19H20O4S (93.2) |
| 31 | 16.82 | 618.3222 | 1.8 | C36H47N2O5P (97.9), C34H50O8S (96.6), C38H52OP2S (96) |
| 32 | 16.82 | 118.0778 | 1.1 | C9H10 (92.7) |
| 33 | 16.82 | 158.1093 | 1.6 | N/A |
| 34 | 16.82 | 908.5126 | 20.9 | C52H78O9P2 (99.4), C53H74N4O5P2 (98.7), C46H64N14O6 (98.6) |
| 35 | 16.82 | 144.0935 | 1.7 | N/A |
| 36 | 16.82 | 146.1091 | 1.7 | N/A |
| 37 | 16.82 | 186.1402 | 1.6 | N/A |
| 38 | 16.82 | 254.1667 | 1.6 | C18H22O (99.1) |
| 39 | 16.83 | 328.1416 | 1.4 | C20H25PS (95.4) |
| 40 | 16.83 | 92.0621 | 1.4 | N/A |
| 41 | 17.21 | 274.1937 | 1.6 | C18H26O2 (98.7) |
| 42 | 17.73 | 300.2092 | 1.0 | C20H28O2 (97.2) |
| 43 | 18.05 | 610.2795 | 0.8 | C35H38N4O6 (99.5), C37H45N2P3 (98.7), C36H34N8O2 (97.8) |
| 44 | 18.31 | 300.2085 | 1.1 | N/A |
| 45 | 18.79 | 326.2249 | 0.7 | C22H30O2 (94.9) |
| 46 | 19.00 | 435.3027 | 1.1 | C23H41N5OS (94.0), C24H42N3O2P (90.4), C22H45NO5S (90.4) |
| 47 | 20.80 | 274.1943 | 1.7 | C18H26O2 (92.0) |
| 48 | 21.51 | 552.3253 | 1.4 | C38H40N4 (98.5), C37H44O4 (96.8), C30H46N6P2 (96.4) |
| 49 | 21.63 | 622.4023 | 0.7 | C42H54O4 (99.6), C43H50N4 (96.7), C36H55N4O3P (95.1) |
| 50 | 21.99 | 598.4036 | 0.6 | C41H50N4 (98.6), C40H54O4 (97.0), C33H56N6P2 (96.0) |
| 51 | 22.70 | 534.2645 | 2.4 | C31H39N2O4P (99.8), C33H34N4O3 (95.3), C32H35N6P (95.1) |
| 52 | 23.11 | 595.1772 | 1.7 | C36H26ClN5O2 (93.1), C36H34ClNOS2 (92.2), C29H26ClN11S (91.5) |
| 53 | 23.54 | 534.3936 | 2.0 | C33H50N4O2 (94.8), C32H54O6 (91.4), C31H55N2O3P (90.5) |
| 54 | 24.07 | 560.4090 | 1.6 | C35H52N4O2 (99.4), C34H56O6 (96.1), C33H57N2O3P (93.3) |
| 55 | 24.21 | 596.3877 | 1.6 | C41H48N4 (98.8), C40H52O4 (97.4), C33H54N6P2 (94.3) |
| 56 | 24.48 | 581.3995 | 1.2 | N/A |
| 57 | 24.47 | 596.4063 | N/A | C34H48N10 (98.3), C31H57N4O5P (97.6), C33H52N6O4 (96.5) |
| 58 | 24.73 | 563.3923 | 1.5 | N/A |
| 59 | 24.73 | 546.3871 | N/A | C40H50O (92.0) |
| 60 | 24.82 | 652.2914 | 1.4 | C38H36N8O3 (98.5), C37H52O2P4 (97.1), C35H45N2O8P (96.8) |
| 61 | 24.83 | 581.4016 | 1.2 | C43H51N (91.2) |
| 62 | 25.02 | 565.4044 | 1.5 | C38H51N3O (95.1), C36H56NO2P (95) |
| 63 | 25.04 | 640.4123 | 0.7 | C36H57N4O4P (99.1), C37H53N8P (97.4), C34H62N2O5P2 (97.4) |
| 64 | 25.16 | 565.4049 | 2.1 | C36H56NO2P (98.7), C38H51N3O (94.9), C30H57N5OP2 (90.4) |
| 65 | 25.16 | 548.4030 | 2.9 | C40H52O (96.8), C32H58N2OP2 (90.5) |
| 66 | 25.37 | 588.4407 | 1.6 | C37H56N4O2 (98.2), C35H61N2O3P (93.6), C36H60O6 (92.6) |
| 67 | 25.59 | 639.4035 | 0.4 | N/A |
| 68 | 25.64 | 563.3889 | 1.9 | C36H54NO2P (98.5), C38H49N3O (95.9) |
| 69 | 25.72 | 639.4068 | 0.5 | N/A |
| 70 | 25.88 | 790.4619 | 1.4 | N/A |
| 71 | 25.89 | 785.5103 | 1.5 | C47H63N9O2 (98.5), C48H74N3P3 (98.0), C44H72N3O7P (97.9) |
| 72 | 26.09 | 981.6413 | 2.0 | C52H92N3O12P (99.4), C47H89N11O7P2 (98.8), C48H100N5O5P5 (98.6) |
| 73 | 26.09 | 986.5968 | 2.0 | C53H74N14O5 (99.0), C60H84N4O4P2 (98.7), C55H86O15 (97.7) |
| 74 | 26.20 | 787.5238 | 1.8 | C45H73NO10 (97.7), C40H70N9O5P (96.1), C40H80N5O2P3S (95.7) |
| 75 | 26.61 | 366.3292 | 0.9 | C27H42 (97.7) |
| 76 | 26.72 | 605.4007 | 1.5 | C45H51N (93.6) |
| 77 | 26.75 | 835.5826 | 1.8 | C58H78NOP (98.5), C50H84N3OP3 (98.3), C49H73N9O3 (97.8) |
| 78 | 27.43 | 739.5623 | 1.8 | C43H83NO2P2S (99), C36H73N11O3S (96.4), C39H81NO9S (96.2) |
| 79 | 27.74 | 384.3400 | 1.4 | C27H44O (93.0) |
| 80 | 27.99 | 549.4112 | 2.5 | N/A |
| 81 | 28.01 | 652.5047 | 1.9 | C39H75OP3 (96.0), C36H69N4O4P (95.3), C35H73O8P (94.3) |
| 82 | 28.35 | 565.4058 | 2.1 | N/A |
| 83 | 28.38 | 549.4112 | 2.3 | C36H56NOP (95.7), C35H55N3S (90.2) |
| 84 | 28.75 | 565.4719 | 1.9 | C35H59N5O (93.4), C33H64N3O2P (92.8), C34H63NO5 (91.8) |
| 85 | 29.03 | 428.3664 | 1.6 | C29H48O2 (95.3) |
| 86 | 29.86 | 916.5733 | 2.2 | C54H81N2O8P (98.6), C49H88N6P4S (97.9), C52H84O11S (97.4) |
| 87 | 29.86 | 937.5355 | 2.1 | N/A |
Notes.
Calculated neutral mass.
Fold change female/male. Metabolite 57 and 59 were not detectable for males.
The three highest ranked candidate molecular formulas. Only candidates with scores ≥90 were included.
Parameter values of OPLS-DA models.
| OPLS-DA model | No | R2X(cum) | R2X | Q2(cum) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control vs. male | 1P + 2O | 0.537 | 0.213 | 0.785 |
| Control vs. female | 1P + 2O | 0.631 | 0.292 | 0.823 |
| Male vs. female | 1P + 2O | 0.874 | 0.465 | 0.87 |
Notes.
No, the number of predictive (P) and orthogonal (O) components.
The R2X(cum) value is the predictive and orthogonal variation in model samples (X) explained by the model.
The R2X value is the amount of variation in X which is correlated to Y (response matrix).
The Q2(cum) value describes the predictive ability of the model, based on sevenfold-cross validation.
Figure 3(A) PCA based on Pareto-scaled raw data showing the separation between sea water controls (black), male (red) and female (blue) exudate samples. (B) PCA on the reduced data-set containing only compounds indicated to be of copepod origin in the control-male and control-female OPLS-DA analysis show a systematic difference also between male and female exudates.