4.4 Article

Evidence for a hydrogen-sink mechanism of (+)catechin-mediated emission reduction of the ruminant greenhouse gas methane

期刊

METABOLOMICS
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 179-189

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11306-013-0554-5

关键词

Methane mitigation; Greenhouse gas methane; Rumen; Catechin; Hydrogen sink; Metabolomics

资金

  1. NL Agency Energy and Climate of the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation (ELI)
  2. EU [STREP 513949, 245121]
  3. Centre for BioSystems Genomics under Netherlands Genomics Initiative
  4. Netherlands Metabolomics Centre under Netherlands Genomics Initiative

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Methane formation in the rumen is a major cause of greenhouse gas emission. Plant secondary compounds in ruminant diets, such as essential oils, saponins and tannins, are known to affect methane production. However, their methane-lowering properties have generally been associated with undesired side effects such as impaired feed digestibility. Here we show that microbial methane formation in diluted and buffered rumen fluid was significantly lowered in the presence of (+)-catechin, a natural polyphenol. This flavan-3-ol, a tannin precursor, decreased the production of methane in a dose-dependent manner, where 1.0 mol catechin prevented the emission of 1.2 mol methane. During methane mitigation, (+)-catechin was step-wise degraded via C- and A-ring cleavage and reductive dehydroxylation reactions, as indicated by LC-QToF-MS based metabolomic profiling and NMR-based metabolite identification. This accounted for the acceptance of six hydrogen atoms per catechin molecule. Consequently, catechin functions as an extensive hydrogen sink, thereby competing with methane production by rumen methanogens (). Catechin therefore acts as an antireductant under the anaerobic test conditions, in contrast to its well-known antioxidant role during oxidative stress. The reductive degradation of catechin had no impact on the formation of ruminal fermentation products such as short-chain fatty acids in this model system. These results highlight the potential of plant secondary compounds to replace methane precursors as hydrogen sinks, and justify future scientific screening programs for similar, potentially more effective organic compounds.

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