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Methyl/alkyl-coenzyme M reductase-based anaerobic alkane oxidation in archaea

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
卷 23, 期 2, 页码 530-541

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15057

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资金

  1. State Key R&D Project of China [2018YFC0310800, 2016YFA0601102]
  2. National Nature Science Foundation of China [41525011, 41902313, 91751205]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Ocean Engineering Foundation [GKZD010075]
  4. DFG Cluster of Excellence 'The Ocean Floor-Earth's Uncharted Interface' at MARUM, University of Bremen [2077]
  5. COMRA Project [DY135-B2-12]

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Recent studies have identified archaea that can anaerobically oxidize methane and non-methane multi-carbon alkanes using specific coenzyme M reductase enzymes. These archaea form syntrophic consortia with sulfate-reducing bacteria to thrive at the thermodynamic limit of life.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) has been originally identified to catalyse the final step of the methanogenesis pathway. About 20 years ago anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea (ANME) were discovered that use MCR enzymes to activate methane. ANME thrive at the thermodynamic limit of life, are slow-growing, and in most cases form syntrophic consortia with sulfate-reducing bacteria. Recently, archaea that have the ability to anaerobically oxidize non-methane multi-carbon alkanes such as ethane and n-butane were described in both enrichment cultures and environmental samples. These anaerobic multi-carbon alkane-oxidizing archaea (ANKA) use enzymes homologous to MCR named alkyl-coenzyme M reductase (ACR). Here we review the recent progresses on the diversity, distribution and functioning of both ANME and ANKA by presenting a detailed MCR/ACR-based phylogeny, compare their metabolic pathways and discuss the gaps in our knowledge of physiology of these organisms. To improve our understanding of alkane oxidation in archaea, we identified three directions for future research: (i) expanding cultivation attempts to validate omics-based metabolic models of yet-uncultured organisms, (ii) performing biochemical and structural analyses of key enzymes to understand thermodynamic and steric constraints and (iii) investigating the evolution of anaerobic alkane metabolisms and their impact on biogeochemical cycles.

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