Dinosterol is used as a biomarker for organic matter derived from dinoflagellates in sediments and seawater. Biomarkers are organic compounds that are indicative of former life in sediments, seawater and oil. The presence of the saturated hydrocarbon counterpart, dinosterane, is used as evidence that some of the organic matter present in ancient sediments may have been derived from dinoflagellates. Dinosterol has been used as an indicator for dinoflagellate production in the Cariaco Basin. In such studies, it has been revealed that the accumulation of dinosterol peaks at a rate of almost 900 mg compound/cm2/yr during the Younger Dryas. Some studies have revealed that certain
dinoflagellates produce sterols that have the potential to serve as genera-specific biomarkers. Recent work showed that dinoflagellate genera, which formed discrete clusters in the 18S rDNA-based phylogeny, shared similar sterol compositions. This suggested that the sterol compositions of dinoflagellates are explained by the evolutionary history of this lineage.
Dinosterol in a Marine Diatom In 1992, Volkman et al. reported the first evidence of dinosterol in a laboratory culture of a marine diatom
Navicula sp., indicating that diatoms may be a source of dinosterol in marine sediments. Dinosterol has been used as a biomarker for dinoflagellates whose sedimentary concentration has been correlated with changes in marine production rates. In a study by Schubert et al., it was shown that dinosterol has a concordant concentration maximum that coincides with organic carbon maxima over the past 200,000 years in a sediment core from the northeastern
Arabian Sea. In this study, dinosterol was used to trace changes in ocean production in the Arabian Sea. Due to similar distributions of dinosterol and brassicasterol, a biomarker indicative of diatom abundances, it was concluded that the relative contributions of the dominant members of the phytoplankton community to production were uniform on timescales greater than 3,000–4,000 years over the past 200,000 years, despite overall paleoproduction having changed dramatically. In a study by Belicka et al., six sediment cores from two shelf-basin transects in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas of the Arctic Ocean were examined in order to compare the sources and preservation of organic carbon between the two differing depositional regimes. This study found an unexpected correlation between dinosterol and α-amyrin, which is found in terrestrial plants, in shelf and slope sediments, in particular the Beaufort Shelf, suggesting that dinoflagellates contribute significantly to phytoplankton abundance in areas of seasonal open water. Hydrogen isotope analysis requires a purification method that achieves GC baseline resolution and is high yielding. Dinosterol coelutes with other sterols during GC; therefore a procedure for proper purification that involves reversed phase-high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) was developed by Atwood et al. The D/H ratio was found to decrease by 0.99 ± 0.23% per unit increase in salinity over the salinity range 10–29 PSU. The correlation between hydrogen isotopic response and salinity may result from diminished exchange of water between algal cells and their environment, lower growth rates and/or increased production of osmolytes at high salinities. ==References==