4.8 Article

The metabolite dimethylsulfoxonium propionate extends the marine organosulfur cycle

Journal

NATURE
Volume 563, Issue 7731, Pages 412-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0675-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [CRC1127]
  2. Max Planck Society (IMPRS BGC)
  3. National Science Foundation [OCE-1756907]
  4. State of Thuringia/Thuringer Aufbaubank [2015 FGI 0021]
  5. EU

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Algae produce massive amounts of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), which fuel the organosulfur cycle(1,2). On a global scale, several petagrams of this sulfur species are produced annually, thereby driving fundamental processes and the marine food web(1). An important DMSP transformation product is dimethylsulfide, which can be either emitted to the atmospher(3,4) or oxidized to dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and other products(5). Here we report the discovery of a structurally unusual metabolite, dimethylsulfoxonium propionate (DMSOP), that is synthesized by several DMSP-producing microalgae and marine bacteria. As with DMSP, DMSOP is a low-molecular-weight zwitterionic metabolite that carries both a positively and a negatively charged functional group. Isotope labelling studies demonstrate that DMSOP is produced from DMSP, and is readily metabolized to DMSO by marine bacteria. DMSOP was found in near nanomolar amounts in field samples and in algal culture media, and thus represents-to our knowledge-a previously undescribed biogenic source for DMSO in the marine environment. The estimated annual oceanic production of oxidized sulfur from this pathway is in the teragram range, similar to the calculated dimethylsulfide flux to the atmosphere(3). This sulfoxonium metabolite is therefore a key metabolite of a previously undescribed pathway in the marine sulfur cycle. These findings highlight the importance of DMSOP in the marine organosulfur cycle.

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