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Candidatus Syntrophosphaera thermopropionivorans: a novel player in syntrophic propionate oxidation during anaerobic digestion
Author(s) -
Dyksma Stefan,
Gallert Claudia
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
environmental microbiology reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.229
H-Index - 69
ISSN - 1758-2229
DOI - 10.1111/1758-2229.12759
Subject(s) - propionate , archaea , candidatus , mesophile , thermophile , 16s ribosomal rna , methanogenesis , anaerobic digestion , bacteria , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , enrichment culture , digestion (alchemy) , chemistry , biochemistry , methane , ecology , genetics , chromatography
Summary Propionate is an important intermediate in the anaerobic mineralization of organic matter. In methanogenic environments, its degradation relies on syntrophic associations between syntrophic propionate‐oxidizing bacteria (SPOB) and Archaea . However, only 10 isolated species have been identified as SPOB so far. We report syntrophic propionate oxidation in thermophilic enrichments of Candidatus Syntrophosphaera thermopropionivorans, a novel representative of the candidate phylum Cloacimonetes . In enrichment culture, methane was produced from propionate, while Ca . S. thermopropionivorans contributed 63% to total bacterial cells. The draft genome of Ca . S. thermopropionivorans encodes genes for propionate oxidation via methymalonyl‐CoA. Phylogenetically, Ca . S. thermopropionivorans affiliates with the uncultured Cloacimonadaceae W5 and is more distantly related (86.4% 16S rRNA gene identity) to Ca . Cloacimonas acidaminovorans. Although Ca . S. thermopropionivorans was enriched from a thermophilic biogas reactor, Ca . Syntrophosphaera was in particular associated with mesophilic anaerobic digestion systems. 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencng and a novel genus‐specific quantitative PCR assay consistently identified Ca . Syntrophosphaera/ Cloacimonadaceae W5 in 9 of 12 tested full‐scale biogas reactors thereby outnumbering other SPOB such as Pelotomaculum , Smithella and Syntrophobacter . Taken together the ubiquity and abundance of Ca . Syntrophosphaera, those SPOB might be key players for syntrophic propionate metabolism that have been overlooked before.

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