Diverse electron carriers drive syntrophic interactions in an enriched anaerobic acetate-oxidizing consortium

Author:

McDaniel Elizabeth A12ORCID,Scarborough Matthew3,Mulat Daniel Girma1,Lin Xuan1,Sampara Pranav S1,Olson Heather M4ORCID,Young Robert P4ORCID,Eder Elizabeth K4,Attah Isaac K4,Markillie Lye Meng4ORCID,Hoyt David W4ORCID,Lipton Mary S4,Hallam Steven J25678ORCID,Ziels Ryan M17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil Engineering, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

2. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Vermont , Burlington, VT, USA

4. Environmental and Biological Sciences Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory , Richland, WA, USA

5. ECOSCOPE Training Program, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

6. Graduate Program in Bioinformatics, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

7. Genome Science and Technology Program, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

8. Life Sciences Institute, The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada

Abstract

Abstract In many anoxic environments, syntrophic acetate oxidation (SAO) is a key pathway mediating the conversion of acetate into methane through obligate cross-feeding interactions between SAO bacteria (SAOB) and methanogenic archaea. The SAO pathway is particularly important in engineered environments such as anaerobic digestion (AD) systems operating at thermophilic temperatures and/or with high ammonia. Despite the widespread importance of SAOB to the stability of the AD process, little is known about their in situ physiologies due to typically low biomass yields and resistance to isolation. Here, we performed a long-term (300-day) continuous enrichment of a thermophilic (55 °C) SAO community from a municipal AD system using acetate as the sole carbon source. Over 80% of the enriched bioreactor metagenome belonged to a three-member consortium, including an acetate-oxidizing bacterium affiliated with DTU068 encoding for carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and formate production, along with two methanogenic archaea affiliated with Methanothermobacter_A. Stable isotope probing was coupled with metaproteogenomics to quantify carbon flux into each community member during acetate conversion and inform metabolic reconstruction and genome-scale modeling. This effort revealed that the two Methanothermobacter_A species differed in their preferred electron donors, with one possessing the ability to grow on formate and the other only consuming hydrogen. A thermodynamic analysis suggested that the presence of the formate-consuming methanogen broadened the environmental conditions where ATP production from SAO was favorable. Collectively, these results highlight how flexibility in electron partitioning during SAO likely governs community structure and fitness through thermodynamic-driven mutualism, shedding valuable insights into the metabolic underpinnings of this key functional group within methanogenic ecosystems.

Funder

Gouvernement du Canada | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Genome British Columbia

DOE | SC | Biological and Environmental Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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