4.3 Article

The Polar Fox Lagoon in Siberia harbours a community of Bathyarchaeota possessing the potential for peptide fermentation and acetogenesis

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10482-022-01767-z

Keywords

Bathyarchaea; Siberia; Thermokarst; Peptide fermentation

Categories

Funding

  1. Soehngen Institute of Anaerobic Microbiology Gravitation program by the Dutch Science Foundation (NWO) [024.002.002]
  2. Netherlands Earth Systems Science Center NESSC by NWO [024.002.001]
  3. Faculty of Science, Radboud University
  4. German Ministry of Education and Research [03F0764F]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study analyzed sediment core genomes from Polar Fox Lagoon in Siberia and found that Bathyarchaeota in the lake mainly degrade peptides and have incomplete degradation pathways for plant-derived polymers. Methanogenesis and hydrogen metabolism were also found to be insufficient, leaving a significant gap in our understanding of their metabolism.
Archaea belonging to the phylum Bathyarchaeota are the predominant archaeal species in cold, anoxic marine sediments and additionally occur in a variety of habitats, both natural and man-made. Metagenomic and single-cell sequencing studies suggest that Bathyarchaeota may have a significant impact on the emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, either through direct production of methane or through the degradation of complex organic matter that can subsequently be converted into methane. This is especially relevant in permafrost regions where climate change leads to thawing of permafrost, making high amounts of stored carbon bioavailable. Here we present the analysis of nineteen draft genomes recovered from a sediment core metagenome of the Polar Fox Lagoon, a thermokarst lake located on the Bykovsky Peninsula in Siberia, Russia, which is connected to the brackish Tiksi Bay. We show that the Bathyarchaeota in this lake are predominantly peptide degraders, producing reduced ferredoxin from the fermentation of peptides, while degradation pathways for plant-derived polymers were found to be incomplete. Several genomes encoded the potential for acetogenesis through the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway, but methanogenesis was determined to be unlikely due to the lack of genes encoding the key enzyme in methanogenesis, methyl-CoM reductase. Many genomes lacked a clear pathway for recycling reduced ferredoxin. Hydrogen metabolism was also hardly found: one type 4e [NiFe] hydrogenase was annotated in a single MAG and no [FeFe] hydrogenases were detected. Little evidence was found for syntrophy through formate or direct interspecies electron transfer, leaving a significant gap in our understanding of the metabolism of these organisms.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available