Litcius/Paper detail

Temperature change elicits lipidome adaptation in the simple organisms Mycoplasma mycoides and JCVI-syn3B

Nataliya Safronova, Lisa Junghans, James Sáenz

2024Cell Reports11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell membranes mediate interactions between life and its environment, with lipids determining their properties. Understanding how cells adjust their lipidomes to tune membrane properties is crucial yet poorly defined due to the complexity of most organisms. We used quantitative shotgun lipidomics to study temperature adaptation in the simple organism Mycoplasma mycoides and the minimal cell JCVI-syn3B. We show that lipid abundances follow a universal logarithmic distribution across eukaryotes and bacteria, with comparable degrees of lipid remodeling for adaptation regardless of lipidomic or organismal complexity. Lipid features analysis demonstrates head-group-specific acyl chain remodeling as characteristic of lipidome adaptation; its deficiency in Syn3B is associated with impaired homeoviscous adaptation. Temporal analysis reveals a two-stage cold adaptation process: swift cholesterol and cardiolipin shifts followed by gradual acyl chain modifications. This work provides an in-depth analysis of lipidome adaptation in minimal cells, laying a foundation to probe the design principles of living membranes.

Topics & Concepts

Mycoplasma mycoidesLipidomeAdaptation (eye)BiologyMycoplasmaMicrobiologyEcologyBiochemistryLipidomicsNeuroscienceBacteriophages and microbial interactionsAquaculture disease management and microbiotaLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior