bMethanotrophs can express a cytoplasmic (soluble) methane monooxygenase (sMMO) or membrane-bound (particulate) methane monooxygenase (pMMO). Expression of these MMOs is strongly regulated by the availability of copper. Many methanotrophs have been found to synthesize a novel compound, methanobactin (Mb), that is responsible for the uptake of copper, and methanobactin produced by Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b plays a key role in controlling expression of MMO genes in this strain. As all known forms of methanobactin are structurally similar, it was hypothesized that methanobactin from one methanotroph may alter gene expression in another. When Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b was grown in the presence of 1 M CuCl 2 , expression of mmoX, encoding a subunit of the hydroxylase component of sMMO, was very low. mmoX expression increased, however, when methanobactin from Methylocystis sp. strain SB2 (SB2-Mb) was added, as did whole-cell sMMO activity, but there was no significant change in the amount of copper associated with M. trichosporium OB3b. If M. trichosporium OB3b was grown in the absence of CuCl 2 , the mmoX expression level was high but decreased by several orders of magnitude if copper prebound to SB2-Mb (Cu-SB2-Mb) was added, and biomass-associated copper was increased. Exposure of Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b to SB2-Mb had no effect on expression of mbnA, encoding the polypeptide precursor of methanobactin in either the presence or absence of CuCl 2 . mbnA expression, however, was reduced when Cu-SB2-Mb was added in both the absence and presence of CuCl 2 . These data suggest that methanobactin acts as a general signaling molecule in methanotrophs and that methanobactin "piracy" may be commonplace.
Methanotrophs are distinguished from other microorganisms by their ability to utilize methane as a sole carbon and energy source yet are phylogenetically and physiologically diverse. Microbial methane oxidation can be coupled to a variety of terminal electron acceptors, including oxygen, sulfate, nitrate, and nitrite (1-4). The aerobic methanotrophs are typically mesophilic and group phylogenetically within the Gammaproteobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria (1). Thermo-and meso-acidophilic aerobic methanotrophs, however, that grow at pH Ͻ3 and at optimal temperatures ranging from 35°C to greater than 50°C have also been discovered in the phylum Verrucomicrobia (5-9). Further, novel oxygenic methanotrophs that couple methane oxidation to nitrite reduction have been reported, e.g., "Candidatus Methylomirabilis oxyfera" that generates oxygen from a unique denitrification pathway, which is then used for methane oxidation (2). Aerobic methanotrophs are found in many environments, e.g., freshwater and marine sediments, bogs, forest, and agricultural soils, among other locations (1, 2, 5-11).These microorganisms have been extensively studied for many different reasons, including the fact that they play a key role in the global carbon cycle. All aerobic methanotrophs employ the enzyme methane monooxygenase (MMO) to co...