The production of the glycosphingolipid --Gal) by a member of the human gut microbiome was an intriguing result because these lipids are known to be immune stimulating antigens, and their production by the gut microbiome suggests a role in host-microbiome signaling.1 -Gal is the canonical agonist for the immune system’s CD1d receptor,2–4 but synthetic work has shown that when the -linked galactose is replaced with novel sugars, or sugar bioisosteres, the activity of the glycosphingolipid in immune signaling can change dramatically.5–7 These results suggest that bacteria which produce these glycosphingolipids, such as soil dwelling members of the order Sphingomonadales,8–10 might be a source of novel bioactive metabolites. In this project we have designed a soil enrichment screen using PCR amplification of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) gene, the first gene involved in sphingolipid synthesis,11,12 to identify sphingolipid producers. Follow-on lipidomic screening of SPT+ organisms on our laboratory’s QTOF LC-MS system will identify novel glycosphingolipids. By utilizing MS/MS fragment spectra analysis we will be able to identify sugar headgroups in our glycosphingolipids from neutral losses of the sugar monomers or the sugar fragment ions. Using GNPS-based molecular networking we will also be able to rapidly dereplicate known glycosphingolipid molecules, speeding up the process of identifying known chemistry to allow us to focus our efforts on novel sugar headgroups. With the novel organisms we isolate we will conduct Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) with the Oxford Nanopore Technology’s nanopore platform to create a genomic data set that can be searched for the SPT gene. Inspired by the “glycogenomic” approach of mapping sugar chemistry in secondary natural products to biosynthetic gene clusters,13 we will also interrogate our genomes compared against the glycosphingolipids identified by LC-MS/MS analysis to identify candidate genes in the biosynthetic pathway after the SPT gene. Though this poses some unique challenges as sphingolipids are primary metabolites and their biosynthesis is not organized in tight biosynthetic gene clusters as is common in secondary natural products, the use of gene knockouts or heterologous expression can help confirm the role of these genes in the production of complex glycosphingolipids. We will also be able to utilize the known promiscuity of bacterial SPT genes to feed in unnatural lipid molecules,1 using LC-MS/MS monitoring to detect the novel glycosphingolipids produced by the incorporation of these feedstocks, demonstrating what strains might be able to be manipulated into producing compounds with desirable changes to the lipid tail of the glycosphingolipids. Glycosphingolipids isolated from scale up of the cultures will be further characterized by NMR analysis to confirm our structure assignment by MS/MS fragmentation analysis. At the end of the project, our glycosphingolipids will be s...