
Energetics of Syntrophic Propionate Oxidation in Defined Batch and Chemostat Cocultures
Author(s) -
Johannes C. M. Scholten,
Ralf Conrad
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.66.7.2934-2942.2000
Subject(s) - chemostat , gibbs free energy , propionate , euryarchaeota , methanogenesis , chemistry , biomass (ecology) , thermodynamics , biology , methane , biochemistry , bacteria , ecology , organic chemistry , physics , genetics , 16s ribosomal rna , gene
Propionate consumption was studied in syntrophic batch and chemostat cocultures ofSyntrophobacter fumaroxidans andMethanospirillum hungatei . The Gibbs free energy available for the H2 -consuming methanogens was <−20 kJ mol of CH4 −1 and thus allowed the synthesis of 1/3 mol of ATP per reaction. The Gibbs free energy available for the propionate oxidizer, on the other hand, was usually >−10 kJ mol of propionate−1 . Nevertheless, the syntrophic coculture grew in the chemostat at steady-state rates of 0.04 to 0.07 day−1 and produced maximum biomass yields of 2.6 g mol of propionate−1 and 7.6 g mol of CH4 −1 forS. fumaroxidans andM. hungatei , respectively. The energy efficiency for syntrophic growth ofS. fumaroxidans , i.e., the biomass produced per unit of available Gibbs free energy was comparable to a theoretical growth yield of 5 to 12 g mol of ATP−1 . However, a lower growth efficiency was observed when sulfate served as an additional electron acceptor, suggesting inefficient energy conservation in the presence of sulfate. The maintenance Gibbs free energy determined from the maintenance coefficient of syntrophically grownS. fumaroxidans was surprisingly low (0.14 kJ h−1 mol of biomass C−1 ) compared to the theoretical value. On the other hand, the Gibbs free-energy dissipation per mole of biomass C produced was much higher than expected. We conclude that the small Gibbs free energy available in many methanogenic environments is sufficient for syntrophic propionate oxidizers to survive on a Gibbs free energy that is much lower than that theoretically predicted.