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In Situ Capture and Real-Time Enrichment of Marine Chemical Diversity
Innovation including research | Nature and the biosphere
Publication Date: November 8, 2023
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
03-06-2025 to 03-12-2025
Available on-demand until 3rd December 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Analyzing the chemical composition of seawater to understand its influence on ecosystem functions is a long-lasting challenge due to the inherent complexity and dynamic nature of marine environments. Describing the intricate chemistry of seawater requires optimal in situ sampling.
Here is presented a novel underwater hand-held solid-phase extraction device, I-SMEL (In Situ Marine moleculE Logger), which aims to concentrate diluted molecules from large volumes of seawater in a delimited zone targeting keystone benthic species.
Marine benthic holobionts, such as sponges, can impact the chemical composition of their surroundings possibly through the production and release of their specialized metabolites, hence termed exometabolites (EMs). I-SMEL was deployed in a sponge-dominated Mediterranean ecosystem at a 15 m depth.
Untargeted MS-based metabolomics was performed on enriched EM extracts and showed (1) the chemical diversity of enriched seawater metabolites and (2) reproducible recovery and enrichment of specialized sponge EMs such as aerothionin, demethylfurospongin-4, and longamide B methyl ester.
These EMs constitute the chemical identity of each targeted species: Aplysina cavernicola, Spongia officinalis, and Agelas oroides, respectively. I-SMEL concentrated sponge EMs from 10 L of water in a 10 min sampling time.
The present proof of concept with I-SMEL opens new research perspectives in marine chemical ecology and sets the stage for further sustainable efforts in natural product chemistry.
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