4.7 Article

Antarctic Soil Metabolomics: A Pilot Study

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241512340

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Antarctica; NMR spectroscopy; mass spectrometry; metabolites

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In Antarctica, ice-free areas harbor microorganisms adapted to harsh conditions. This study presents an efficient protocol for extracting and metabolically profiling Antarctic soils using NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The results demonstrate the complementarity of the two techniques and their suitability for analyzing underexplored samples.
In Antarctica, ice-free areas can be found along the coast, on mountain peaks, and in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, where microorganisms well-adapted to harsh conditions can survive and reproduce. Metabolic analyses can shed light on the survival mechanisms of Antarctic soil communities from both coastal sites, under different plant coverage stages, and inner sites where slow-growing or dormant microorganisms, low water availability, salt accumulation, and a limited number of primary producers make metabolomic profiling difficult. Here, we report, for the first time, an efficient protocol for the extraction and the metabolic profiling of Antarctic soils based on the combination of NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry (MS). This approach was set up on samples harvested along different localities of Victoria Land, in continental Antarctica, devoid of or covered by differently developed biological crusts. NMR allowed for the identification of thirty metabolites (mainly sugars, amino acids, and organic acids) and the quantification of just over twenty of them. UPLC-MS analysis identified more than twenty other metabolites, in particular flavonoids, medium- and long-chain fatty acids, benzoic acid derivatives, anthracenes, and quinones. Our results highlighted the complementarity of the two analytical techniques. Moreover, we demonstrated that their combined use represents the gold standard for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of little-explored samples, such as those collected from Antarctic soils.

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