AI Article Synopsis

  • Tocopherols are important antioxidants in photosynthetic organisms, but their widespread presence makes them less useful as paleoenvironmental indicators, and traditional analysis methods are challenging.
  • A study of black shale from the Demerara Rise during the Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE-2) examined tocopherols and their derivatives using advanced mass spectrometry, discovering new compounds like tocopherol quinones.
  • The research found that increased tocopherol levels during OAE-2 could be linked to environmental changes that heightened oxidative stress and improved preservation due to anoxic conditions, suggesting significant insights into ancient photosynthetic life and their adaptations.

Article Abstract

Tocopherols serve a critical role as antioxidants inhibiting lipid peroxidation in photosynthetic organisms, yet are seldom used in geobiological investigations. The ubiquity of tocopherols in all photosynthetic lifeforms is often cited as an impediment to any diagnostic paleoenvironmental potential, while the inability to readily analyze these compounds via conventional methods, such as gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, further diminishes the capacity to serve as useful 'biomarkers'. Here, we analyzed an exceptionally preserved black shale sequence from the Demerara Rise that spans Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE-2) to reexamine the significance of tocopherols and associated derivatives (i.e. tocol derivatives) in ancient sediments. Tocol derivatives were analyzed via liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight-mass spectrometry and included tocopherols, a methyltrimethyltridecylchroman, and the first reported detection of tocopherol quinones and methylphytylbenzoquinones in the geologic record. Strong correlations between tocol derivatives were observed over the studied interval. Tocol derivative concentrations and ratios, which normalized tocopherols to potential derivatives, revealed absolute and relative increases in tocopherols as exclusive features of OAE-2 that can be explained by two possible mechanisms related to tocopherol production and preservation. The development of photic zone euxinia during OAE-2 likely forced an upward migration of oxygenic photoautotrophs, increasing oxidative stress that elicited heightened tocopherol biosynthesis. However, shoaling euxinic conditions may have simultaneously acted to enhance tocopherol preservation given the relatively high lability of tocopherols in the water column. Both scenarios could produce the observed stratigraphic distribution of tocol derivatives in this study, although the elevated tocopherol concentrations that define OAE-2 at the Demerara Rise are primarily attributed to enhanced tocopherol production by shoaling phytoplanktonic communities. Thus, the occurrence of tocopherols and associated derivatives in sediments and rocks of marine origin is likely indicative of shallow-water anoxia, tracking the phytoplanktonic response to the abiotic stresses associated with vertical fluctuations in pelagic redox.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12570DOI Listing

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