4.8 Article

Genomic and metagenomic surveys of hydrogenase distribution indicate H2 is a widely utilised energy source for microbial growth and survival

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 761-777

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2015.153

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CSIRO Office of the Chief Executive Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. Geothermal Resources of New Zealand (GNS Science)
  3. Environmental Technologies (Scion)

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Recent physiological and ecological studies have challenged the long-held belief that microbial metabolism of molecular hydrogen (H-2) is a niche process. To gain a broader insight into the importance of microbial H-2 metabolism, we comprehensively surveyed the genomic and metagenomic distribution of hydrogenases, the reversible enzymes that catalyse the oxidation and evolution of H-2. The protein sequences of 3286 non-redundant putative hydrogenases were curated from publicly available databases. These metalloenzymes were classified into multiple groups based on (1) amino acid sequence phylogeny, (2) metal-binding motifs, (3) predicted genetic organisation and (4) reported biochemical characteristics. Four groups (22 subgroups) of [NiFe]-hydrogenase, three groups (6 subtypes) of [FeFe]-hydrogenases and a small group of [Fe]-hydrogenases were identified. We predict that this hydrogenase diversity supports H-2-based respiration, fermentation and carbon fixation processes in both oxic and anoxic environments, in addition to various H-2-sensing, electron-bifurcation and energy-conversion mechanisms. Hydrogenase-encoding genes were identified in 51 bacterial and archaeal phyla, suggesting strong pressure for both vertical and lateral acquisition. Furthermore, hydrogenase genes could be recovered from diverse terrestrial, aquatic and host-associated metagenomes in varying proportions, indicating a broad ecological distribution and utilisation. Oxygen content (pO(2)) appears to be a central factor driving the phylum- and ecosystem-level distribution of these genes. In addition to compounding evidence that H-2 was the first electron donor for life, our analysis suggests that the great diversification of hydrogenases has enabled H-2 metabolism to sustain the growth or survival of microorganisms in a wide range of ecosystems to the present day. This work also provides a comprehensive expanded system for classifying hydrogenases and identifies new prospects for investigating H-2 metabolism.

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