Affiliation:
1. Darling Marine Center, University of Maine, Walpole, Maine 04573
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two methanotrophic bacteria,
Methylobacter albus
BG8 and
Methylosinus trichosporium
OB3b, oxidized atmospheric methane during batch growth on methanol. Methane consumption was rapidly and substantially diminished (95% over 9 days) when washed cell suspensions were incubated without methanol in the presence of atmospheric methane (1.7 ppm). Methanotrophic activity was stimulated after methanol (10 mM) but not methane (1,000 ppm) addition.
M. albus
BG8 grown in continuous culture for 80 days with methanol retained the ability to oxidize atmospheric methane and oxidized methane in a chemostat air supply. Methane oxidation during growth on methanol was not affected by methane deprivation. Differences in the kinetics of methane uptake (apparent
K
m
and
V
max
) were observed between batch- and chemostat-grown cultures. The
V
max
and apparent
K
m
values (means ± standard errors) for methanol-limited chemostat cultures were 133 ± 46 nmol of methane 10
8
cells
−1
h
−1
and 916 ± 235 ppm of methane (1.2 μM), respectively. These values were significantly lower than those determined with batch-grown cultures (
V
max
of 648 ± 195 nmol of methane 10
8
cells
−1
h
−1
and apparent
K
m
of 5,025 ± 1,234 ppm of methane [6.3 μM]). Methane consumption by soils was stimulated by the addition of methanol. These results suggest that methanol or other nonmethane substrates may promote atmospheric methane oxidation in situ.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
58 articles.
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