M/Z: 165.0546


Hit 1 annotations:  2-Hydroxycinnamic acid_[M+H]+


在BioDeep NovoCell知识数据库中,参考离子总共被划分为4个级别。
  • Confirmed: 这个参考离子已经通过手动审计得到确认和验证。
  • Reliable: 这个参考离子可能在特定的解剖组织环境中高度保守。
  • Unreliable: 这个参考离子具有较高的排名价值,但缺乏可重复性。
  • Unavailable: 由于排名价值低且缺乏可重复性,这个参考离子不应用于注释。

Found 3 Reference Ions Near m/z 165.0546
NovoCell ID m/z Mass Window Metabolite Ranking Anatomy Context
MSI_000052850 Reliable 165.0553 165.055 ~ 165.0558
MzDiff: 3.0 ppm
2-Hydroxycinnamic acid (BioDeep_00000001088)
Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
8.62 (100%) DESI
[NOVOCELL:BACKGROUND] blank
MSI_000035142 Unreliable 165.0543 165.0543 ~ 165.0543
MzDiff: none
2-Hydroxycinnamic acid (BioDeep_00000001088)
Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
1.62 (100%) Posidonia oceanica
[PO:0006203] pericycle
MSI_000039806 Unreliable 165.0545 165.0545 ~ 165.0545
MzDiff: none
2-Hydroxycinnamic acid (BioDeep_00000001088)
Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
1.37 (100%) Posidonia oceanica
[PO:0005417] phloem

Found 19 Sample Hits
Metabolite Species Sample
2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 15.9)
Marker Pen (NA)
3ul_0.8Mpa_RAW_20241016-PAPER PNMK
Resolution: 30μm, 315x42

Description

By writing the four English letters “PNMK” on white paper with a marker pen, and then scanning with a DESI ion source to obtain the scanning result. The signal of the chemical substances on the marker pen used appears on the channel with an m/z value of 322.1918, 323.1953, 546.4010, and etc, from the single cell deconvolution sampling layer class_4. This test data was tested by chuxiaoping from PANOMIX’s R&D laboratory.

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.9)
Posidonia oceanica (root)
20190614_MS1_A19r-20
Resolution: 17μm, 262x276

Description

Seagrasses are one of the most efficient natural sinks of carbon dioxide (CO2) on Earth. Despite covering less than 0.1% of coastal regions, they have the capacity to bury up to 10% of marine organic matter and can bury the same amount of carbon 35 times faster than tropical rainforests. On land, the soil’s ability to sequestrate carbon is intimately linked to microbial metabolism. Despite the growing attention to the link between plant production, microbial communities, and the carbon cycle in terrestrial ecosystems, these processes remain enigmatic in the sea. Here, we show that seagrasses excrete organic sugars, namely in the form of sucrose, into their rhizospheres. Surprisingly, the microbial communities living underneath meadows do not fully use this sugar stock in their metabolism. Instead, sucrose piles up in the sediments to mM concentrations underneath multiple types of seagrass meadows. Sediment incubation experiments show that microbial communities living underneath a meadow use sucrose at low metabolic rates. Our metagenomic analyses revealed that the distinct community of microorganisms occurring underneath meadows is limited in their ability to degrade simple sugars, which allows these compounds to persist in the environment over relatively long periods of time. Our findings reveal how seagrasses form blue carbon stocks despite the relatively small area they occupy. Unfortunately, anthropogenic disturbances are threatening the long-term persistence of seagrass meadows. Given that these sediments contain a large stock of sugars that heterotopic bacteria can degrade, it is even more important to protect these ecosystems from degradation.

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.1)
Posidonia oceanica (root)
20190822_MS1_A19r-19
Resolution: 17μm, 303x309

Description

Seagrasses are among the most efficient sinks of carbon dioxide on Earth. While carbon sequestration in terrestrial plants is linked to the microorganisms living in their soils, the interactions of seagrasses with their rhizospheres are poorly understood. Here, we show that the seagrass, Posidonia oceanica excretes sugars, mainly sucrose, into its rhizosphere. These sugars accumulate to µM concentrations—nearly 80 times higher than previously observed in marine environments. This finding is unexpected as sugars are readily consumed by microorganisms. Our experiments indicated that under low oxygen conditions, phenolic compounds from P. oceanica inhibited microbial consumption of sucrose. Analyses of the rhizosphere community revealed that many microbes had the genes for degrading sucrose but these were only expressed by a few taxa that also expressed genes for degrading phenolics. Given that we observed high sucrose concentrations underneath three other species of marine plants, we predict that the presence of plant-produced phenolics under low oxygen conditions allows the accumulation of labile molecules across aquatic rhizospheres.

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 0.1)
Posidonia oceanica (root)
20190613_MS1_A19r-18
Resolution: 17μm, 246x264

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.9)
Posidonia oceanica (root)
20190828_MS1_A19r-22
Resolution: 17μm, 292x279

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 0.7)
Posidonia oceanica (root)
MS1_20180404_PO_1200
Resolution: 17μm, 193x208

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 4.1)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_3
Resolution: 75μm, 121x68

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.1)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_4
Resolution: 17μm, 82x80

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 2.3)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO29_16_2
Resolution: 17μm, 95x101

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 4.1)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_9
Resolution: 75μm, 89x74

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.7)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO29_16_3
Resolution: 17μm, 108x107

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 2.3)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
TO31T
Resolution: 75μm, 56x54

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 4.7)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_5
Resolution: 75μm, 135x94

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 2.9)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_7
Resolution: 75μm, 69x54

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 3.5)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_1_8
Resolution: 75μm, 69x61

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 6.2)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_2_1
Resolution: 75μm, 89x88

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 4.7)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO22_2_2
Resolution: 75μm, 135x94

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 1.7)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO29_18_2
Resolution: 75μm, 62x68

Description

2-Hydroxycinnamic acid

Formula: C9H8O3 (164.0473)
Adducts: [M+H]+ (Ppm: 7.2)
Homo sapiens (esophagus)
LNTO30_7_2
Resolution: 75μm, 82x68

Description