Zampieri Guido, Santinello Davide, Palù Matteo, Orellana Esteban, Costantini Paola, Favaro Lorenzo, Campanaro Stefano, Treu Laura
Department of Biology, University of Padova, Via U. Bassi 58/b, Padova 35131, Italy.
Department of Agronomy, Food, Natural Resources, Animals and Environment (DAFNAE), University of Padova, Agripolis, Viale dell'Università 16, Legnaro, 35020, Italy.
ISME J. 2025 Jan 2;19(1). doi: 10.1093/ismejo/wraf017.
Biological conversion of carbon dioxide into methane has a crucial role in global carbon cycling and is operated by a specialised set of anaerobic archaea. Although it is known that this conversion is strictly linked with cooperative bacterial activity, such as through syntrophic acetate oxidation, there is also a limited understanding on how this cooperation is regulated and metabolically realised. In this work, we investigate the activity in a microbial community evolved to efficiently convert carbon dioxide into methane and predominantly populated by Methanothermobacter wolfeii. Through multi-omics, biochemical analysis and constraint-based modelling, we identify a potential formate cross-feeding from an uncharacterised Limnochordia species to M. wolfeii, driven by the recently discovered reductive glycine pathway and upregulated when hydrogen and carbon dioxide are limited. The quantitative consistency of this metabolic exchange with experimental data is shown by metagenome-scale metabolic models integrating condition-specific metatranscriptomics, which also indicate a broader three-way interaction involving M. wolfeii, the Limnochordia species, and Sphaerobacter thermophilus. Under limited hydrogen and carbon dioxide, aspartate released by M. wolfeii is fermented by Sphaerobacter thermophilus into acetate, which in turn is convertible into formate by Limnochordia, possibly forming a cooperative loop sustaining hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis. These findings expand our knowledge on the modes of carbon dioxide reduction into methane within natural microbial communities and provide an example of cooperative plasticity surrounding this process.
二氧化碳向甲烷的生物转化在全球碳循环中起着关键作用,由一组专门的厌氧古菌进行。尽管已知这种转化与细菌的协同活动密切相关,例如通过互营乙酸氧化,但对于这种协同作用是如何调节和代谢实现的,人们的了解仍然有限。在这项研究中,我们调查了一个经过进化以高效将二氧化碳转化为甲烷且主要由沃氏嗜热甲烷杆菌组成的微生物群落的活性。通过多组学、生化分析和基于约束的建模,我们发现了一种潜在的甲酸盐交叉喂养现象,即一种未鉴定的丝状菌属物种向沃氏嗜热甲烷杆菌提供甲酸盐,这是由最近发现的还原性甘氨酸途径驱动的,并且在氢气和二氧化碳有限时上调。整合条件特异性宏转录组学的宏基因组规模代谢模型显示了这种代谢交换与实验数据的定量一致性,该模型还表明存在涉及沃氏嗜热甲烷杆菌、丝状菌属物种和嗜热球形杆菌的更广泛的三方相互作用。在氢气和二氧化碳有限的情况下,沃氏嗜热甲烷杆菌释放的天冬氨酸被嗜热球形杆菌发酵成乙酸盐,而乙酸盐又可被丝状菌属物种转化为甲酸盐,这可能形成一个维持氢营养型甲烷生成的协同循环。这些发现扩展了我们对自然微生物群落中二氧化碳还原为甲烷方式的认识,并提供了围绕这一过程的协同可塑性的一个例子。