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Wide diversity of methane and short-chain alkane metabolisms in uncultured archaea.

Authors :
Borrel, Guillaume
Borrel, Guillaume
Adam, Panagiotis S
McKay, Luke J
Chen, Lin-Xing
Sierra-García, Isabel Natalia
Sieber, Christian MK
Letourneur, Quentin
Ghozlane, Amine
Andersen, Gary L
Li, Wen-Jun
Hallam, Steven J
Muyzer, Gerard
de Oliveira, Valéria Maia
Inskeep, William P
Banfield, Jillian F
Gribaldo, Simonetta
Borrel, Guillaume
Borrel, Guillaume
Adam, Panagiotis S
McKay, Luke J
Chen, Lin-Xing
Sierra-García, Isabel Natalia
Sieber, Christian MK
Letourneur, Quentin
Ghozlane, Amine
Andersen, Gary L
Li, Wen-Jun
Hallam, Steven J
Muyzer, Gerard
de Oliveira, Valéria Maia
Inskeep, William P
Banfield, Jillian F
Gribaldo, Simonetta
Source :
Nature microbiology; vol 4, iss 4, 603-613; 2058-5276
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Methanogenesis is an ancient metabolism of key ecological relevance, with direct impact on the evolution of Earth's climate. Recent results suggest that the diversity of methane metabolisms and their derivations have probably been vastly underestimated. Here, by probing thousands of publicly available metagenomes for homologues of methyl-coenzyme M reductase complex (MCR), we have obtained ten metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) belonging to potential methanogenic, anaerobic methanotrophic and short-chain alkane-oxidizing archaea. Five of these MAGs represent under-sampled (Verstraetearchaeota, Methanonatronarchaeia, ANME-1 and GoM-Arc1) or previously genomically undescribed (ANME-2c) archaeal lineages. The remaining five MAGs correspond to lineages that are only distantly related to previously known methanogens and span the entire archaeal phylogeny. Comprehensive comparative annotation substantially expands the metabolic diversity and energy conservation systems of MCR-bearing archaea. It also suggests the potential existence of a yet uncharacterized type of methanogenesis linked to short-chain alkane/fatty acid oxidation in a previously undescribed class of archaea ('Candidatus Methanoliparia'). We redefine a common core of marker genes specific to methanogenic, anaerobic methanotrophic and short-chain alkane-oxidizing archaea, and propose a possible scenario for the evolutionary and functional transitions that led to the emergence of such metabolic diversity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature microbiology; vol 4, iss 4, 603-613; 2058-5276
Notes :
Nature microbiology vol 4, iss 4, 603-613 2058-5276
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367452804
Document Type :
Electronic Resource