Polyunsaturated aldehyde
Polyunsaturated aldehydes are a group of allelopathic chemicals typically associated with predator–prey interactions between diatoms and small crustaceans known as copepods. These compounds are classified by an aldehyde group covalently bound to long carbon chains containing two or more carbon–carbon double bonds. Examples include isomers of heptadienal, octadienal, octatrienal, and decatrienal.
Production by diatoms
aldehydes are oxylipins that are formed from lipids when diatoms are exposed to environmental stresses. Stresses can include nutrient limitations, grazing by predators, and wounding.In particular, damage to diatom cells as a result of grazing by zooplankton invokes a chemical defense mechanism that produces PUA's as secondary metabolites from fatty acids. The production mechanism is as follows:
- Grazing by predators results in diatom cell membrane disruption.
- Enzymes are produced in response to the damaged membranes. These enzymes make contact with newly freed phospholipids and catalyze the formation of polyunsaturated fatty acids.
- The enzyme lipoxygenase then catalyzes the reaction of fatty acids to polyunsaturated aldehydes, which are then directly exposed to the grazing zooplankton.