4.7 Article

Patterns of syntrophic interactions in methanogenic conversion of propionate

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 105, Issue 23, Pages 8937-8949

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-021-11645-9

Keywords

Methanogenesis; Syntrophy; Syntrophobacter; Methanoculleus; Anaerobic digestion

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [2025339]
  2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

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This study identified the important role of Syntrophobacter in syntrophic propionate conversion, while the methanogen partners lacked consistency. Propionate conversion was mainly achieved through the transformation of propionate into acetate and hydrogen.
Methanogenesis is central to anaerobic digestion processes. The conversion of propionate as a key intermediate for methanogenesis requires syntrophic interactions between bacterial and archaeal partners. In this study, a series of methanogenic enrichments with propionate as the sole substrate were developed to identify microbial populations specifically involved in syntrophic propionate conversion. These rigorously controlled propionate enrichments exhibited functional stability with consistent propionate conversion and methane production; yet, the methanogenic microbial communities experienced substantial temporal dynamics, which has important implications on the understanding of mechanisms involved in microbial community assembly in anaerobic digestion. Syntrophobacter was identified as the most abundant and consistent bacterial partner in syntrophic propionate conversion regardless of the origin of the source culture, the concentration of propionate, or the temporal dynamics of the culture. In contrast, the methanogen partners involved in syntrophic propionate conversion lacked consistency, as the dominant methanogens varied as a function of process condition and temporal dynamics. Methanoculleus populations were specifically enriched as the syntrophic partner at inhibitory levels of propionate, likely due to the ability to function under unfavorable environmental conditions. Syntrophic propionate conversion was carried out exclusively via transformation of propionate into acetate and hydrogen in enrichments established in this study. Microbial populations highly tolerant of elevated propionate, represented by Syntrophobacter and Methanoculleus, are of great significance in understanding methanogenic activities during process perturbations when propionate accumulation is frequently encountered.

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