#METABOLOMICS WORKBENCH JKubanek_20210720_081653_mwtab.txt DATATRACK_ID:2759 STUDY_ID:ST001895 ANALYSIS_ID:AN003076 PROJECT_ID:000000
VERSION             	1
CREATED_ON             	July 23, 2021, 2:13 pm
#PROJECT
PR:PROJECT_TITLE                 	Differentiating toxic and nontoxic congeneric harmful algae using the non-polar
PR:PROJECT_TITLE                 	metabolome
PR:PROJECT_TYPE                  	Using metabolomics to compare species
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	Recognition and rejection of chemically defended prey is critical to maximizing
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	fitness for predators. Paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) which strongly inhibit
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	voltage-gated sodium channels in diverse animal taxa are produced by several
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	species of the bloom-forming algal genus Alexandrium where they appear to
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	function as chemical defenses against grazing copepods. Despite PSTs being
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	produced and localized within phytoplankton cells, some copepods distinguish
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	toxic from non-toxic prey, selectively ingesting less toxic cells, in ways that
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	suggest cell surface recognition perhaps associated with non-polar metabolites.
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	In this study LC/MS and NMR-based metabolomics revealed that the non-polar
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	metabolomes of two toxic species (Alexandrium catenella and Alexandrium
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	pacificum) vary considerably from their non-toxic congener Alexandrium tamarense
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	despite all three being very closely related. Toxic and non-toxic Alexandrium
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	spp. were distinguished from each other by metabolites belonging to seven lipid
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	classes. Of these, 17 specific metabolites were significantly more abundant in
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	both toxic A. catenella and A. pacificum compared to non-toxic A. tamarense
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	suggesting that just a small portion of the observed metabolic variability is
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	associated with toxicity. Future experiments aimed at deciphering chemoreception
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	mechanisms of copepod perception of Alexandrium toxicity should consider these
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	metabolites, and the broader lipid classes phosphatidylcholines and sterols, as
PR:PROJECT_SUMMARY               	potential candidate cues.
PR:INSTITUTE                     	Georgia Institute of Technology
PR:DEPARTMENT                    	School of Biological Sciences, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Center for
PR:DEPARTMENT                    	Microbial Dynamics and Infection, Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering
PR:DEPARTMENT                    	and Bioscience
PR:LABORATORY                    	Kubanek Lab
PR:LAST_NAME                     	Brown
PR:FIRST_NAME                    	Emily
PR:ADDRESS                       	950 Atlantic Dr Atlanta, GA, 30332, USA
PR:EMAIL                         	julia.kubanek@biosci.gatech.edu
PR:PHONE                         	404-894-8424
PR:PROJECT_COMMENTS              	This study has 3 parts: 2 NMR (Experiment 1: A. catenella-A. tamarense &
PR:PROJECT_COMMENTS              	Experiment 2: A. pacificum-A. tamarense) and MS
PR:CONTRIBUTORS                  	Emily R. Brown, Sam G. Moore, David A. Gaul, and Julia Kubanek
#STUDY
ST:STUDY_TITLE                   	NMR Differentiating toxic and nontoxic congeneric harmful algae using the
ST:STUDY_TITLE                   	non-polar metabolome (Experiment 1)
ST:STUDY_TYPE                    	1H NMR Metabolomics to compare toxic and non-toxic species
ST:STUDY_SUMMARY                 	Metabolomics comparison of toxic and non-toxic species of phytoplankton from the
ST:STUDY_SUMMARY                 	genus Alexandrium.This study was carried out using 2 pairwise experiments, A.
ST:STUDY_SUMMARY                 	catenella compared to A. tamarense (Experiment 1) and A. pacificum compared to
ST:STUDY_SUMMARY                 	A. tamarense (Experiment 2). This study includes the NMR data from Experiment 1.
ST:INSTITUTE                     	Georgia Institute of Technology
ST:DEPARTMENT                    	School of Biological Sciences, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Center for
ST:DEPARTMENT                    	Microbial Dynamics and Infection, Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering
ST:DEPARTMENT                    	and Bioscience
ST:LABORATORY                    	Kubanek Lab
ST:LAST_NAME                     	Brown
ST:FIRST_NAME                    	Emily
ST:ADDRESS                       	950 Atlantic Dr Atlanta, Georgia USA 30332
ST:EMAIL                         	julia.kubanek@biosci.gatech.edu
ST:PHONE                         	404-894-8424
ST:NUM_GROUPS                    	2
ST:TOTAL_SUBJECTS                	30
ST:STUDY_COMMENTS                	Part 1 of 3. This part includes NMR analysis of non-polar metabolites from
ST:STUDY_COMMENTS                	Experiment 1 using oPLSDA. Parts 2 and 3 inlcude NMR analysis of non-polar
ST:STUDY_COMMENTS                	metabolites from Experiment 2 and the corresponding mass spectrometry
ST:STUDY_COMMENTS                	metabolomics for both Experiments 1 and 2.
#SUBJECT
SU:SUBJECT_TYPE                  	Other organism
SU:SUBJECT_SPECIES               	Alexandrium catenella; Alexandrium tamarense; Alexandrium pacificum
SU:TAXONOMY_ID                   	2925; 2926
SU:GENOTYPE_STRAIN               	CCMP 1719; CCMP 2023
SU:GENDER                        	Not applicable
#SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS:         	SUBJECT(optional)[tab]SAMPLE[tab]FACTORS(NAME:VALUE pairs separated by |)[tab]Raw file names and additional sample data
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 1	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 1; Cells_per_mL=15596; Number_of_cells_extracted=3883404; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=240; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=855
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 2	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 2; Cells_per_mL=16338; Number_of_cells_extracted=4068162; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=251; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=895
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 3	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 3; Cells_per_mL=14482; Number_of_cells_extracted=3606018; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=223; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=794
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 4	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 4; Cells_per_mL=13491; Number_of_cells_extracted=3359259; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=208; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=739
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 5	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 5; Cells_per_mL=15101; Number_of_cells_extracted=3760149; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=232; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=828
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 6	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 6; Cells_per_mL=15101; Number_of_cells_extracted=3760149; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=232; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=828
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 7	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 7; Cells_per_mL=14977; Number_of_cells_extracted=3729273; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=230; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=821
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 8	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 8; Cells_per_mL=13863; Number_of_cells_extracted=3451887; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=213; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=760
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 9	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 9; Cells_per_mL=12996; Number_of_cells_extracted=3236004; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=200; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=712
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 10	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 10; Cells_per_mL=13120; Number_of_cells_extracted=3266880; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=202; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=719
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 11	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 11; Cells_per_mL=13491; Number_of_cells_extracted=3359259; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=208; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=739
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 12	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 12; Cells_per_mL=13244; Number_of_cells_extracted=3297756; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=204; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=726
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 13	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 13; Cells_per_mL=13615; Number_of_cells_extracted=3390135; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=210; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=746
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 14	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 14; Cells_per_mL=14358; Number_of_cells_extracted=3575142; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=221; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=787
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Acatenella 15	Treatment:Alexandrium_catenella	RAW_FILE_NAME=Acatenella 15; Cells_per_mL=13120; Number_of_cells_extracted=3266880; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=202; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=719
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 1	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 1; Cells_per_mL=16214; Number_of_cells_extracted=4037286; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=250; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=889
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 2	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 2; Cells_per_mL=15224; Number_of_cells_extracted=3790776; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=234; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=834
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 3	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 3; Cells_per_mL=15348; Number_of_cells_extracted=3821652; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=236; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=841
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 4	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 4; Cells_per_mL=15224; Number_of_cells_extracted=3790776; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=234; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=834
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 5	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 5; Cells_per_mL=15348; Number_of_cells_extracted=3821652; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=236; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=841
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 6	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 6; Cells_per_mL=16586; Number_of_cells_extracted=4129914; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=255; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=909
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 7	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 7; Cells_per_mL=14358; Number_of_cells_extracted=3575142; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=221; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=787
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 8	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 8; Cells_per_mL=16214; Number_of_cells_extracted=4037286; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=250; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=889
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 9	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 9; Cells_per_mL=14977; Number_of_cells_extracted=3729273; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=230; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=821
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 10	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 10; Cells_per_mL=15843; Number_of_cells_extracted=3944907; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=244; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=868
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 11	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 11; Cells_per_mL=15596; Number_of_cells_extracted=3883404; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=240; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=855
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 12	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 12; Cells_per_mL=14729; Number_of_cells_extracted=3667521; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=227; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=807
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 13	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 13; Cells_per_mL=13987; Number_of_cells_extracted=3482763; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=215; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=767
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 14	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=Atamarense 14; Cells_per_mL=15843; Number_of_cells_extracted=3944907; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=244; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=868
SUBJECT_SAMPLE_FACTORS           	-	Atamarense 15	Treatment:Alexandrium_tamarense	RAW_FILE_NAME=none; Cells_per_mL=15843; Number_of_cells_extracted=3944907; NMR_solvent_volume (uL)=244; MS_solvent_volume (uL)=868
#COLLECTION
CO:COLLECTION_SUMMARY            	Alexandrium cells were collected by vacuum filtration onto GF/F filters and
CO:COLLECTION_SUMMARY            	quenched with liquid nitrogen. Frozen cells with filters were stored in foil
CO:COLLECTION_SUMMARY            	(previously muffled for 3 h at 450 °C) at -80 °C until extraction.
CO:COLLECTION_PROTOCOL_FILENAME  	Differentiating toxic and nontoxic congeneric harmful algae using the non-polar
CO:COLLECTION_PROTOCOL_FILENAME  	metabolome_protocol.pdf
CO:SAMPLE_TYPE                   	Algae
CO:COLLECTION_METHOD             	Filtration and Freeze
CO:STORAGE_CONDITIONS            	-80℃
#TREATMENT
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	Metabolomes of toxic versus non-toxic species were compared using the following
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	experimental pairings: A. tamarense (n=15) with A. catenella (n=15) (Experiment
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	1) and A. tamarense (n=15) with A. pacificum (n=15) (Experiment 2). The same
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	non-toxic strain of A. tamarense was used in both experiments but the two
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	experiments were conducted separately, in different months, to make the
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	experiment manageable based on availability of batches grown from stock
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	cultures. For both experiments, Alexandrium spp. cultures at a cell density of
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	12,000 to 13,000 cells mL-1 were split into fifteen 300 mL subcultures of each
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	species which grew for two days. At the end of each experiment, during
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	harvesting, a 1.0 mL aliquot from each culture was preserved with Lugol’s
TR:TREATMENT_SUMMARY             	solution to measure cell concentrations
TR:TREATMENT_PROTOCOL_FILENAME   	Differentiating toxic and nontoxic congeneric harmful algae using the non-polar
TR:TREATMENT_PROTOCOL_FILENAME   	metabolome_protocol.pdf
TR:TREATMENT                     	Species comparison
#SAMPLEPREP
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	Non polar extracts were dissolved with volumes calculated to account for
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	different cell densities at the time of harvesting, to a concentration
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	equivalent to 1.62 x 10^7 Alexandrium cells mL-1 in dimethyl sulfoxide d6 (99.9%
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	atom d6-DMSO; Cambridge Isotope Labs) containing 0.1% trimethylsilane (TMS) as
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	internal standard for 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy analysis.
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	The extracts were transferred to 3 mm NMR tubes. Extracts from Experiment 1 (A.
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	tamarense-A. catenella) were analyzed using a Bruker Avance IIIHD 800 MHz NMR
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	spectrometer equipped with a 3 mm triple resonance broadband cryoprobe. Spectra
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	of non-polar extracts from both experiments were acquired using a Bruker zg30
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	pulse sequence 1H NMR experiment compiled from 320 scans. Due to poor NMR
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	spectral quality one A. tamarense replicate spectrum was removed from analysis
SP:SAMPLEPREP_SUMMARY            	of Experiment 1 (A. tamarense-A. catenella.
SP:SAMPLEPREP_PROTOCOL_FILENAME  	Differentiating toxic and nontoxic congeneric harmful algae using the non-polar
SP:SAMPLEPREP_PROTOCOL_FILENAME  	metabolome_protocol.pdf
SP:EXTRACT_STORAGE               	-80℃
#ANALYSIS
AN:ANALYSIS_TYPE                 	NMR
#NMR
NM:INSTRUMENT_NAME               	Bruker Avance IIIHD
NM:INSTRUMENT_TYPE               	FT-NMR
NM:NMR_EXPERIMENT_TYPE           	1D-1H
NM:SPECTROMETER_FREQUENCY        	800 MHz
NM:NMR_PROBE                     	3 mm triple resonance broadband cryoprobe
NM:NMR_SOLVENT                   	Dimethyl sulfoxide d6 (99.9% atom d6-DMSO; Cambridge Isotope Labs) containing
NM:NMR_SOLVENT                   	0.1% trimethylsilane
NM:NMR_TUBE_SIZE                 	3 mm
NM:PULSE_SEQUENCE                	zg30
NM:NUMBER_OF_SCANS               	320
NM:BASELINE_CORRECTION_METHOD    	Spline
NM:BINNED_INCREMENT              	0.005 ppm
NM:NMR_RESULTS_FILE              	Preprocessed_binned_Experiment1_AcvAt_NMRmetabolomics.txt	UNITS:area under the curve
#END