2018
DOI: 10.1128/aem.01572-18
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Formate and Hydrogen as Electron Shuttles in Terminal Fermentations in an Oligotrophic Freshwater Lake Sediment

Abstract: The energetic situation of terminal fermentations in methanogenesis was analyzed by pool size determinations in sediment cores taken in the oligotrophic Lake Constance, Germany. Distribution profiles of fermentation intermediates and products were measured at three different water depths (2, 10, and 80 m). Methane concentrations were constant below 10 cm of sediment depth. Within the methanogenic zone, concentrations of formate, acetate, propionate, and butyrate varied between 1 and 40 μM, and hydrogen was bet… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Overall, reaction stoichiometry, metagenomic analyses, and metabolite measurements all support a synergistic nature of methane-dependent arsenate reduction, carried out by the aerobic methanotrophs and members of Burkholderiaceae, with formate as the interspecies electron carrier. Formate is well known to support methanogenesis-based syntrophy and was demonstrated to mediate the methane-oxidation-based selenate reduction recently . The present study provides another clear example for formate coupling aeMO to the reduction of oxides, highlighting the possibility that similar trophic relationships may link methane metabolism to a range of terminal electron acceptors in (hyp)­oxic environments.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Overall, reaction stoichiometry, metagenomic analyses, and metabolite measurements all support a synergistic nature of methane-dependent arsenate reduction, carried out by the aerobic methanotrophs and members of Burkholderiaceae, with formate as the interspecies electron carrier. Formate is well known to support methanogenesis-based syntrophy and was demonstrated to mediate the methane-oxidation-based selenate reduction recently . The present study provides another clear example for formate coupling aeMO to the reduction of oxides, highlighting the possibility that similar trophic relationships may link methane metabolism to a range of terminal electron acceptors in (hyp)­oxic environments.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…) suggests that this pathway was indeed responsible for propionate oxidation in the enrichment cultivation. Smithella have been reported to play an important role in propionate degradation in different environments including paddy field soils (Lueders et al ., ; Gan et al ., ), natural wetlands (Chauhan and Ogram, ), lake sediment (Montag and Schink, ) and anaerobic bioreactors (Zhang et al ., ). These organisms seem also to be adapted to various harsh conditions in bioreactors such as low propionate concentration (Ariesyady et al ., ), limitation of trace elements Mo, W and Se (Worm et al ., ) and high organic loading and toxic accumulation (Ban et al ., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, G301 would gain energy with CO-mediated respiration in disparate environmental conditions. This metabolic trait may be advantageous in an oxic-anoxic interface because it allows prokaryotes to use CO from the atmosphere or other sources such as hydrothermal vents (72), soil (73), seawater (74) or freshwater environments (75, 76) with fluctuating O 2 levels. Explorations in such changeable environmental conditions would lead to the discovery of novel CO oxidizers with previously unknown combinations of distinct CO metabolisms, providing further insight into the diversity, evolution, and industrial applications of such prokaryotes with intriguing respiration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%