Jonathan Gropp, Markus Bill, Daniel Stolper, Dipti Nayak
{"title":"利用一种可遗传处理的产甲烷菌研究微生物甲烷的同位素组成","authors":"Jonathan Gropp, Markus Bill, Daniel Stolper, Dipti Nayak","doi":"10.3897/aca.6.e108567","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Nearly all biogenic methane is produced by a group of microorganisms called methanogenic archaea (or methanogens). Methanogens can use a variety of substrates, such as H 2 + CO 2 , acetate, and methylated compounds, for methanogenesis. Previous studies have shown that the stable carbon and hydrogen isotopic compositions of methane produced by methanogens can vary drastically depending on the substrate composition and concentration in the environment. For instance, the concentration of H 2 in the environment has a substantial impact on the isotopic composition of methane derived from hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis (reduction of CO 2 to methane using H 2 as the electron donor) (Valentine et al. 2004, Penning et al. 2005). While there is substantial empirical data on isotopic signatures of methane from different substrates and under different conditions, the physiological and molecular features that control these values are not as well understood. To address this, we are using the metabolically diverse and genetically tractable methanogen, Methanosarcina acetivorans as a model system to uncover key cellular processes that control the stable bulk isotopic composition of methane (i.e., 13 C/ 12 C and D/H ratios), and the distributions of the “clumped” 13 CH 3 D and 12 CH 2 D 2 isotopologues. The methanogen M. acetivorans grows on a wide variety of compounds such as acetate, methanol, methylamines, and methylsulfides. We found that the methylotrophic pathways (for methanol and trimethylamine) and the aceticlastic pathway have large and similar primary hydrogen isotopic effects (α of ~0.45). These data are in contrast to previous findings and imply a minor isotopic exchange between CH 4 and H 2 O (Valentine et al. 2004, Gruen et al. 2018). Focusing first on the methylotrophic pathway, we generated mutants of two key enzymes in the methylotrophic pathway: a) methyl coenzyme M reductase (Mcr) that catalyzes the last step in methanogenesis and b) methyltransferases that catalyze the first step in methylotrophic methanogenesis from methanol (Mta). A mutant with reduced Mcr expression had no observable change in the hydrogen isotopic effect relative to the wild-type, validating the initial observation of minimal H 2 O-CH 4 hydrogen isotopic exchange. One of the Mta mutants, which only expressed a specific methyltransferase isoform, had a smaller carbon isotopic effect relative to the other isoforms (α of ~1.074 vs. ~1.080). Since the isoforms are thought to be identical in structure, the different isotopic effects could result from differential expression of each isoform, or from different kinetic properties. By combining our genetic approaches with traditional and high-resolution isotopic analytical methods, we aim to develop a quantitative understanding of the mechanisms that control the isotopic compositions of biological methane. Our preliminary results show that M. acetivorans would be an ideal candidate for such research, which could help in understanding methanogens’ physiology in natural environments in past, present, and future Earth.","PeriodicalId":101714,"journal":{"name":"ARPHA Conference Abstracts","volume":"206 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Studying the isotopic composition of microbial methane with a genetically-tractable methanogen\",\"authors\":\"Jonathan Gropp, Markus Bill, Daniel Stolper, Dipti Nayak\",\"doi\":\"10.3897/aca.6.e108567\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Nearly all biogenic methane is produced by a group of microorganisms called methanogenic archaea (or methanogens). Methanogens can use a variety of substrates, such as H 2 + CO 2 , acetate, and methylated compounds, for methanogenesis. Previous studies have shown that the stable carbon and hydrogen isotopic compositions of methane produced by methanogens can vary drastically depending on the substrate composition and concentration in the environment. For instance, the concentration of H 2 in the environment has a substantial impact on the isotopic composition of methane derived from hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis (reduction of CO 2 to methane using H 2 as the electron donor) (Valentine et al. 2004, Penning et al. 2005). While there is substantial empirical data on isotopic signatures of methane from different substrates and under different conditions, the physiological and molecular features that control these values are not as well understood. To address this, we are using the metabolically diverse and genetically tractable methanogen, Methanosarcina acetivorans as a model system to uncover key cellular processes that control the stable bulk isotopic composition of methane (i.e., 13 C/ 12 C and D/H ratios), and the distributions of the “clumped” 13 CH 3 D and 12 CH 2 D 2 isotopologues. The methanogen M. acetivorans grows on a wide variety of compounds such as acetate, methanol, methylamines, and methylsulfides. We found that the methylotrophic pathways (for methanol and trimethylamine) and the aceticlastic pathway have large and similar primary hydrogen isotopic effects (α of ~0.45). These data are in contrast to previous findings and imply a minor isotopic exchange between CH 4 and H 2 O (Valentine et al. 2004, Gruen et al. 2018). Focusing first on the methylotrophic pathway, we generated mutants of two key enzymes in the methylotrophic pathway: a) methyl coenzyme M reductase (Mcr) that catalyzes the last step in methanogenesis and b) methyltransferases that catalyze the first step in methylotrophic methanogenesis from methanol (Mta). A mutant with reduced Mcr expression had no observable change in the hydrogen isotopic effect relative to the wild-type, validating the initial observation of minimal H 2 O-CH 4 hydrogen isotopic exchange. One of the Mta mutants, which only expressed a specific methyltransferase isoform, had a smaller carbon isotopic effect relative to the other isoforms (α of ~1.074 vs. ~1.080). Since the isoforms are thought to be identical in structure, the different isotopic effects could result from differential expression of each isoform, or from different kinetic properties. By combining our genetic approaches with traditional and high-resolution isotopic analytical methods, we aim to develop a quantitative understanding of the mechanisms that control the isotopic compositions of biological methane. Our preliminary results show that M. acetivorans would be an ideal candidate for such research, which could help in understanding methanogens’ physiology in natural environments in past, present, and future Earth.\",\"PeriodicalId\":101714,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"ARPHA Conference Abstracts\",\"volume\":\"206 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-17\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"ARPHA Conference Abstracts\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.3897/aca.6.e108567\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ARPHA Conference Abstracts","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3897/aca.6.e108567","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
几乎所有的生物甲烷都是由一组叫做产甲烷古菌(或产甲烷菌)的微生物产生的。产甲烷菌可以使用多种底物,如h2 + CO 2,醋酸酯和甲基化化合物,用于产甲烷。先前的研究表明,产甲烷菌产生的甲烷的稳定碳和氢同位素组成可以根据环境中的底物组成和浓度发生巨大变化。例如,环境中h2的浓度对氢营养产甲烷(利用h2作为电子供体将CO 2还原为甲烷)产生的甲烷的同位素组成有重大影响(Valentine et al. 2004, Penning et al. 2005)。虽然有大量关于不同基质和不同条件下甲烷同位素特征的经验数据,但控制这些值的生理和分子特征尚未得到很好的理解。为了解决这个问题,我们使用代谢多样化和遗传易处理的甲烷菌Methanosarcina acetivorans作为模型系统来揭示控制甲烷稳定体积同位素组成(即13c / 12c和D/H比率)的关键细胞过程,以及“团块”13ch3 D和12ch2 d2同位素的分布。产甲烷菌m.a evtivorans生长在多种化合物上,如醋酸盐、甲醇、甲胺和甲基硫化物。我们发现甲基化途径(甲醇和三甲胺)和醋酸化途径具有大而相似的初级氢同位素效应(α为~0.45)。这些数据与之前的发现形成对比,表明甲烷和h2o之间存在少量同位素交换(Valentine et al. 2004, Gruen et al. 2018)。首先关注甲基化营养途径,我们生成了甲基化营养途径中两个关键酶的突变体:a)催化甲烷生成最后一步的甲基辅酶M还原酶(Mcr)和b)催化甲醇甲基化甲烷生成第一步的甲基转移酶(Mta)。Mcr表达降低的突变体与野生型相比,氢同位素效应没有明显变化,这证实了最初观察到的最小H 2 O-CH 4氢同位素交换。其中一个Mta突变体只表达一个特定的甲基转移酶亚型,相对于其他亚型,其碳同位素效应较小(α为~1.074 vs ~1.080)。由于同工异构体被认为在结构上是相同的,不同的同位素效应可能是由于每个同工异构体的不同表达或不同的动力学性质造成的。通过将我们的遗传方法与传统的高分辨率同位素分析方法相结合,我们的目标是对控制生物甲烷同位素组成的机制进行定量理解。我们的初步结果表明,m.a etivorans将是这类研究的理想候选者,这将有助于了解过去、现在和未来地球自然环境中产甲烷菌的生理学。
Studying the isotopic composition of microbial methane with a genetically-tractable methanogen
Nearly all biogenic methane is produced by a group of microorganisms called methanogenic archaea (or methanogens). Methanogens can use a variety of substrates, such as H 2 + CO 2 , acetate, and methylated compounds, for methanogenesis. Previous studies have shown that the stable carbon and hydrogen isotopic compositions of methane produced by methanogens can vary drastically depending on the substrate composition and concentration in the environment. For instance, the concentration of H 2 in the environment has a substantial impact on the isotopic composition of methane derived from hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis (reduction of CO 2 to methane using H 2 as the electron donor) (Valentine et al. 2004, Penning et al. 2005). While there is substantial empirical data on isotopic signatures of methane from different substrates and under different conditions, the physiological and molecular features that control these values are not as well understood. To address this, we are using the metabolically diverse and genetically tractable methanogen, Methanosarcina acetivorans as a model system to uncover key cellular processes that control the stable bulk isotopic composition of methane (i.e., 13 C/ 12 C and D/H ratios), and the distributions of the “clumped” 13 CH 3 D and 12 CH 2 D 2 isotopologues. The methanogen M. acetivorans grows on a wide variety of compounds such as acetate, methanol, methylamines, and methylsulfides. We found that the methylotrophic pathways (for methanol and trimethylamine) and the aceticlastic pathway have large and similar primary hydrogen isotopic effects (α of ~0.45). These data are in contrast to previous findings and imply a minor isotopic exchange between CH 4 and H 2 O (Valentine et al. 2004, Gruen et al. 2018). Focusing first on the methylotrophic pathway, we generated mutants of two key enzymes in the methylotrophic pathway: a) methyl coenzyme M reductase (Mcr) that catalyzes the last step in methanogenesis and b) methyltransferases that catalyze the first step in methylotrophic methanogenesis from methanol (Mta). A mutant with reduced Mcr expression had no observable change in the hydrogen isotopic effect relative to the wild-type, validating the initial observation of minimal H 2 O-CH 4 hydrogen isotopic exchange. One of the Mta mutants, which only expressed a specific methyltransferase isoform, had a smaller carbon isotopic effect relative to the other isoforms (α of ~1.074 vs. ~1.080). Since the isoforms are thought to be identical in structure, the different isotopic effects could result from differential expression of each isoform, or from different kinetic properties. By combining our genetic approaches with traditional and high-resolution isotopic analytical methods, we aim to develop a quantitative understanding of the mechanisms that control the isotopic compositions of biological methane. Our preliminary results show that M. acetivorans would be an ideal candidate for such research, which could help in understanding methanogens’ physiology in natural environments in past, present, and future Earth.