4.4 Article

A novel, divergent alkane monooxygenase (alkB) clade involved in crude oil biodegradation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 830-840

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1758-2229.13018

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative [321611-00]

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Alkanes are commonly found in marine ecosystems, originating from natural oil seeps, human inputs, and biogenic production by cyanobacteria. A novel AlkB clade was discovered in the Gulf of Mexico, significantly increased in crude-oil impacted ecosystems, contrasting with traditional AlkB clades associated with cyanobacterial alkane biotransformation.
Alkanes are ubiquitous in marine ecosystems and originate from diverse sources ranging from natural oil seeps to anthropogenic inputs and biogenic production by cyanobacteria. Enzymes that degrade cyanobacterial alkanes (typically C15-C17 compounds) such as the alkane monooxygenase (AlkB) are widespread, but it remains unclear whether or not AlkB variants exist that specialize in degradation of crude oil from natural or accidental spills, a much more complex mixture of long-chain hydrocarbons. In the present study, large-scale analysis of available metagenomic and genomic data from the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) oil spill revealed a novel, divergent AlkB clade recovered from genomes with no cultured representatives that was dramatically increased in abundance in crude-oil impacted ecosystems. In contrast, the AlkB clades associated with biotransformation of cyanobacterial alkanes belonged to 'canonical' or hydrocarbonoclastic clades, and based on metatranscriptomics data and compared to the novel clade, were much more weakly expressed during crude oil biodegradation in laboratory mesocosms. The absence of this divergent AlkB clade in metagenomes of uncontaminated samples from the global ocean survey but not from the GoM as well as its frequent horizontal gene transfer indicated a priming effect of the Gulf for crude oil biodegradation likely driven by natural oil seeps.

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