18Environmental reconstructions based on microbial lipids require understanding the coupling 19 between environmental conditions and membrane physiology. The paleotemperature proxy TEX86 is 20 built on the observation that archaea alter the number of five-and six-membered rings in the 21 hydrophobic core of their glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) membrane lipids when 22 growing at different temperatures. However, recent work with these archaea also highlights a role 23 for other factors, such as pH or energy availability in determining the degree of core lipid cyclization.
24To better understand the role of these variables we cultivated a model Crenarchaeon, Sulfolobus 25 acidocaldarius, over a range in temperature, pH, oxygen flux, or agitation speed, and quantified the 26 changes in growth rate, biomass yield, and core lipid compositions. The average degree of cyclization 27 in core lipids correlated with growth rate under most conditions. When considered alongside other 28 experimental findings from both the thermoacidophilic and mesoneutrophilic archaea, the results 29 suggest the cyclization of archaeal lipids records a universal response to energy availability at the 30 cellular level. Although we isolated the effects of individual parameters, there remains a need for 31 multi-factor experiments (e.g., pH + temperature + redox) to establish a robust framework to 52 model thermoacidophile, Sulfolobus acidocaldarius DSM639 (hereafter DSM639), under different regimes 53 of pH, temperature, physical perturbation, or oxygen availability. This model organism grows quickly and 54 to high densities, has the ability to grow under different culture conditions, has a suite of genetic tools 55 available for downstream manipulation (19), and has a known biochemical mechanism of ring cyclization 56 (20). In this study we quantified core GDGTs and the average abundance of cyclopentyl rings, as well as 57 growth parameters such as doubling time and biomass yield. We observed clear trends between growth rate 58 and ring abundance across all conditions. Under cultivation conditions farthest from the organismal optimum, DSM639 produced several additional GDGT isomers in addition to the typical suite of GDGTs.
60We discuss the implications for batch and bioreactor-based cultivation efforts and highlight the need for 61 multiparameter studies going forward. 62 63 2.0 Methods 64 Axenic cultures of DSM639 were cultivated in either batch cultures exchanging with the 65 atmosphere or in closed, gas-fed batches. Medium was prepared following Wagner et al. (2012), with 66 sucrose (0.2% w/v) and oxygen as the electron donor/acceptor pair. In closed batch experiments a single 67 parameter was varied per experimenttemperature (65, 70, 75 and 80 °C), pH (2, 3, 4), or shaking speed 68 (0, 50, 61, 75, 97, 125, 200 or 300 RPM)where default "optimal" parameters were 70 °C, pH 3, and 200 69 RPM. Five biological replicates were cultivated per condition. Atmospheric batch experiments were 70 performed in temperature-controlled sh...