Methylotrophic methanogenesis in the Archaeoglobi revealed by cultivation of Ca. Methanoglobus hypatiae from a Yellowstone hot spring.
Mackenzie M LynesZackary J JayAnthony J KohtzRoland HatzenpichlerPublished in: The ISME journal (2024)
Over the past decade, environmental metagenomics and PCR-based marker gene surveys have revealed that several lineages beyond just a few well-established groups within the Euryarchaeota superphylum harbor the genetic potential for methanogenesis. One of these groups are the Archaeoglobi, a class of thermophilic euryarchaeotes that have long been considered to live non-methanogenic lifestyles. Here, we enriched Candidatus Methanoglobus hypatiae, a methanogen affiliated with the family Archaeoglobaceae, from a hot spring in Yellowstone National Park. The enrichment is sediment-free, grows at 64-70 °C and a pH of 7.8, and produces methane from mono-, di-, and tri-methylamine. Ca. M. hypatiae is represented by a 1.62 Mb metagenome-assembled genome with an estimated completeness of 100% and accounts for up to 67% of cells in the culture according to fluorescence in situ hybridization. Via genome-resolved metatranscriptomics and stable isotope tracing, we demonstrate that Ca. M. hypatiae expresses methylotrophic methanogenesis and energy-conserving pathways for reducing monomethylamine to methane. The detection of Archaeoglobi populations related to Ca. M. hypatiae in 36 geochemically diverse geothermal sites within Yellowstone National Park, as revealed through the examination of previously published gene amplicon datasets, implies a previously underestimated contribution to anaerobic carbon cycling in extreme ecosystems.
Keyphrases
- anaerobic digestion
- genome wide
- sewage sludge
- copy number
- climate change
- quality improvement
- induced apoptosis
- microbial community
- dna methylation
- single cell
- genome wide identification
- heavy metals
- oxidative stress
- escherichia coli
- real time pcr
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- cell cycle arrest
- radiation therapy
- wastewater treatment
- cross sectional
- systematic review
- high intensity
- cell proliferation
- squamous cell carcinoma
- randomized controlled trial
- quantum dots
- drug induced