Orotidine
Formula: C10H12N2O8 (288.0594)
Chinese Name: 乳清苷, 乳清酸核苷
BioDeep ID: BioDeep_00000017895
( View LC/MS Profile)
SMILES: OC[C@H]1O[C@H]([C@H](O)[C@@H]1O)N1C(=O)NC(=O)C=C1C(O)=O
Found 12 Sample Hits
m/z | Adducts | Species | Organ | Scanning | Sample | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
288.0563 | [M]+PPM:8.7 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_91_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 50μm, 120x114
Grape berries fruit, condition: Ripe |
|
289.0683 | [M+H]+PPM:5.7 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_91_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 50μm, 120x114
Grape berries fruit, condition: Ripe |
|
288.0561 | [M]+PPM:9.4 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_164_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 17μm, 136x122
Grape berries fruit, condition: Late |
|
289.0683 | [M+H]+PPM:5.7 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_164_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 17μm, 136x122
Grape berries fruit, condition: Late |
|
288.0561 | [M]+PPM:9.4 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_163_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 17μm, 132x115
Grape berries fruit, condition: Late |
|
289.0683 | [M+H]+PPM:5.7 |
Vitis vinifera | Fruit | MALDI (DHB) |
grape_dhb_163_1 - Grape DatabaseResolution: 17μm, 132x115
Grape berries fruit, condition: Late |
|
289.0697 | [M+H]+PPM:10.6 |
Posidonia oceanica | root | MALDI (CHCA) |
20190614_MS1_A19r-20 - MTBLS1746Resolution: 17μm, 262x276
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. |
|
289.0703 | [M+H]+PPM:12.7 |
Posidonia oceanica | root | MALDI (CHCA) |
MS1_20180404_PO_1200 - MTBLS1746Resolution: 17μm, 193x208
|
|
311.0437 | [M+Na]+PPM:15.7 |
Posidonia oceanica | root | MALDI (CHCA) |
MS1_20180404_PO_1200 - MTBLS1746Resolution: 17μm, 193x208
|
|
289.0686 | [M+H]+PPM:6.8 |
Mus musculus | Liver | MALDI (CHCA) |
Salmonella_final_pos_recal - MTBLS2671Resolution: 17μm, 691x430
A more complete and holistic view on host–microbe interactions is needed to understand the physiological and cellular barriers that affect the efficacy of drug treatments and allow the discovery and development of new therapeutics. Here, we developed a multimodal imaging approach combining histopathology with mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) and same section imaging mass cytometry (IMC) to study the effects of Salmonella Typhimurium infection in the liver of a mouse model using the S. Typhimurium strains SL3261 and SL1344. This approach enables correlation of tissue morphology and specific cell phenotypes with molecular images of tissue metabolism. IMC revealed a marked increase in immune cell markers and localization in immune aggregates in infected tissues. A correlative computational method (network analysis) was deployed to find metabolic features associated with infection and revealed metabolic clusters of acetyl carnitines, as well as phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine plasmalogen species, which could be associated with pro-inflammatory immune cell types. By developing an IMC marker for the detection of Salmonella LPS, we were further able to identify and characterize those cell types which contained S. Typhimurium.
[dataset] Nicole Strittmatter. Holistic Characterization of a Salmonella Typhimurium Infection Model Using Integrated Molecular Imaging, metabolights_dataset, V1; 2022. https://www.ebi.ac.uk/metabolights/MTBLS2671. |
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289.0633 | [M+H]+PPM:11.6 |
Homo sapiens | esophagus | DESI () |
LNTO22_1_9 - MTBLS385Resolution: 75μm, 89x74
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289.0629 | [M+H]+PPM:12.9 |
Homo sapiens | esophagus | DESI () |
LNTO22_1_7 - MTBLS385Resolution: 75μm, 69x54
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Orotidine is a nucleoside formed by attaching orotic acid to a ribose ring via a beta-N1-glycosidic bond. It is a water-soluble solid. Orotidine is found in bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals. In humans, orotidine occurs as its 5-phosphate (orotidylic acid), which is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleosides (cytidine and uridine) that are found in nucleic acids (as the nucleotides containing the bases cytosine and uracil). Orotidine itself is not a component of nucleic acid. Orotidine monophosphate (OMP) is converted to uridine monophosphate by OMP decarboxylase, which is inhibited by mononucleotide precursors. Large amounts of orotidine are excreted in the urine of cancer patients treated with 6-azauridine, which is one such inhibitor, indicating that the subject has increased DNA synthesis due to cancer. Orotidine was first isolated from a mutant strain of the fungus Neurospora by A. Michael Michelson, William Drell, and Herschel K. Mitchell (PMID: 14853953). Isolated from Phaseolus vulgaris (kidney bean) Orotidine. CAS Common Chemistry. CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, n.d. https://commonchemistry.cas.org/detail?cas_rn=314-50-1 (retrieved 2024-07-16) (CAS RN: 314-50-1). Licensed under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).