Publication | Open Access
Chemistry of oxylipin pathways in marine diatoms
126
Citations
26
References
2007
Year
Harmful MicroalgaeEngineeringMarine ChemistryOceanographyChemical BiologyRedox BiologyBiosynthesisAquacultureBiological OceanographyBiochemistryDiscourage PredationAbstract OxylipinsMarine BiotaBiologyOxylipin ChemistryNatural SciencesOxylipin PathwaysMarine BiologyMetabolism
Abstract Oxylipins are important signal transduction molecules widely distributed in animals and plants where they regulate a variety of events associated with physiological and pathological processes. The family embraces several different metabolites that share a common origin from the oxygenase-catalyzed oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids. The biological role of these compounds has been especially studied in mammalians and higher plants, although a varied and very high concentration of these products has also been reported from marine macroalgae. This article gives a summary of our results concerning the oxylipin chemistry of marine diatoms, a major class of planktonic microalgae that discourage predation from their natural grazers, zooplanktonic copepods, using chemical warfare. These apparently harmless microscopic cells produce a plethora of oxylipins, including short-chain unsaturated aldehydes, hydroxyl-, keto-, and epoxyhydroxy fatty acid derivatives, that induce reproductive failure in copepods through abortions, congenital malformations, and reduced larval growth. The biochemical process involved in the production of these compounds shows a simple regulation based on decompartmentation and mixing of preexisting enzymes and requires hydrolysis of chloroplast-derived glycolipids to feed the downstream activities of C 16 and C 20 lipoxygenases.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1