Premium
Evidence for anaerobic syntrophic acetate oxidation during methane production in the profundal sediment of subtropical Lake Kinneret (Israel)
Author(s) -
Nüsslein Bernhard,
Chin KukJeong,
Eckert Werner,
Conrad Ralf
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1046/j.1462-2920.2001.00215.x
Subject(s) - methanogenesis , anoxic waters , profundal zone , sediment , euryarchaeota , methane , bicarbonate , environmental chemistry , ethyl acetate , biology , chemistry , nuclear chemistry , biochemistry , ecology , organic chemistry , archaea , paleontology , gene
Methane production was measured in samples of the profundal sediment from Lake Kinneret. Production rates of CH 4 were higher at 30°C than at the in situ temperature of 15°C and were higher in the top 5 cm layer than below. Turnover of [2‐ 14 C]‐acetate resulted in the production of 14 CH 4 and 14 CO 2 with turnover times of < 42 min. However, < 30% of the added radioactivity was converted to gaseous products, indicating that only part of the acetate pool was microbially available. The calculated acetate turnover rates were sufficient to account for total CH 4 production, indicating that CH 4 was produced exclusively from acetate. This conclusion was confirmed by inhibition of methanogens with chloroform, which resulted in an almost stoichiometric accumulation of acetate. However, a large percentage (30–60%) of [2‐ 14 C]‐acetate was converted to 14 CO 2 , despite lack of reducible sulphate or other oxidants in the sediment. Anoxic preincubation of the sediment did not result in reduced production of 14 CO 2 . Therefore, part of the acetate must have been oxidized rather than methanogenically cleaved. Conversion of [ 14 C]‐bicarbonate to 14 CH 4 indicated that 30–50% of total CH 4 production originated from reduction of CO 2 . To reconcile the relatively high contribution of H 2 /CO 2 ‐dependent methanogenesis with the relatively high oxidative conversion of acetate, we assume that part of the acetate was used syntrophically by consortia of acetate‐oxidizing bacteria and H 2 /CO 2 ‐using methanogens. This conclusion is supported by favourable thermodynamic conditions for syntrophic acetate oxidation under in situ conditions and complete inhibition of [2‐ 14 C]‐acetate turnover at high H 2 partial pressures. Further evidence to support this conclusion comes from the analysis of the structure of the archaeal community. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T‐RFLP) and partial sequence analysis of the SSU rRNA genes amplified from DNA extracts of the sediment showed Methanomicrobiaceae as the dominant methanogenic group, whereas acetoclastic methanogens could not be detected.