Literature DB >> 23104405

Identification of Methanoculleus spp. as active methanogens during anoxic incubations of swine manure storage tank samples.

Maialen Barret1, Nathalie Gagnon, Martin L Kalmokoff, Edward Topp, Yris Verastegui, Stephen P J Brooks, Fernando Matias, Josh D Neufeld, Guylaine Talbot.   

Abstract

Methane emissions represent a major environmental concern associated with manure management in the livestock industry. A more thorough understanding of how microbial communities function in manure storage tanks is a prerequisite for mitigating methane emissions. Identifying the microorganisms that are metabolically active is an important first step. Methanogenic archaea are major contributors to methanogenesis in stored swine manure, and we investigated active methanogenic populations by DNA stable isotope probing (DNA-SIP). Following a preincubation of manure samples under anoxic conditions to induce substrate starvation, [U-(13)C]acetate was added as a labeled substrate. Fingerprint analysis of density-fractionated DNA, using length-heterogeneity analysis of PCR-amplified mcrA genes (encoding the alpha subunit of methyl coenzyme M reductase), showed that the incorporation of (13)C into DNA was detectable at in situ acetate concentrations (~7 g/liter). Fingerprints of DNA retrieved from heavy fractions of the (13)C treatment were primarily enriched in a 483-bp amplicon and, to a lesser extent, in a 481-bp amplicon. Analyses based on clone libraries of the mcrA and 16S rRNA genes revealed that both of these heavy DNA amplicons corresponded to Methanoculleus spp. Our results demonstrate that uncultivated methanogenic archaea related to Methanoculleus spp. were major contributors to acetate-C assimilation during the anoxic incubation of swine manure storage tank samples. Carbon assimilation and dissimilation rate estimations suggested that Methanoculleus spp. were also major contributors to methane emissions and that the hydrogenotrophic pathway predominated during methanogenesis.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23104405      PMCID: PMC3553783          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02268-12

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  36 in total

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