Abstract

In syntrophic conversion of butyrate to methane and CO2, butyrate is oxidized to acetate by secondary fermenting bacteria such as Syntrophomonas wolfei in close cooperation with methanogenic partner organisms, e.g., Methanospirillum hungatei. This process involves an energetically unfavourable shift of electrons from the level of butyryl-CoA oxidation to the substantially lower redox potential of proton and/or CO2 reduction, in order to transfer these electrons to the methanogenic partner via hydrogen and/or formate.In the present study, all prominent membrane-bound and soluble proteins expressed in S. wolfei specifically during syntrophic growth with butyrate, in comparison to pure-culture growth with crotonate, were examined by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and identified by peptide fingerprinting-mass spectrometry. A membrane-bound, externally oriented, quinone-linked formate dehydrogenase complex was expressed at high level specifically during syntrophic butyrate oxidation, comprising a selenocystein-linked catalytic subunit with a membrane-translocation pathway signal (TAT), a membrane-bound iron-sulfur subunit, and a membrane-bound cytochrome. Soluble hydrogenases were expressed at high levels specifically during growth with crotonate. The results were confirmed by native protein gel electrophoresis, by formate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase-activity staining, and by analysis of formate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase activities in intact cells and cell extracts. Furthermore, constitutive expression of a membrane-bound, internally oriented iron-sulfur oxidoreductase (DUF224) was confirmed, together with expression of soluble electron-transfer flavoproteins (EtfAB) and two previously identified butyryl-CoA dehydrogenases.Our findings allow to depict an electron flow scheme for syntrophic butyrate oxidation in S. wolfei. Electrons derived from butyryl-CoA are transferred through a membrane-bound EtfAB:quinone oxidoreductase (DUF224) to a menaquinone cycle and further via a b-type cytochrome to an externally oriented formate dehydrogenase. Hence, an ATP hydrolysis-driven proton-motive force across the cytoplasmatic membrane would provide the energy input for the electron potential shift necessary for formate formation.

Highlights

  • Fermentation of butyrate to methane and CO2 is catalyzed by fatty acid-oxidizing bacteria in syntrophic cooperation with hydrogen-scavenging, methanogenic partner organisms, e.g., by Syntrophomonas wolfei in cooperation with Methanospirillum hungatei

  • Proteins identified by peptide fingerprinting-mass spectrometry in the membrane fraction of S. wolfei cells Isolated membrane fragments derived from S. wolfei cells grown with butyrate or crotonate were solubilized with SDS or dodecylmaltoside and the solubilized proteins separated by 1DSDS-PAGE

  • A band observed at the start of the SDS-PAGE separation gel was excised and submitted to peptide fingerprinting-mass spectrometry (PF-MS)

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Summary

Introduction

Fermentation of butyrate to methane and CO2 is catalyzed by fatty acid-oxidizing bacteria in syntrophic cooperation with hydrogen-scavenging, methanogenic partner organisms, e.g., by Syntrophomonas wolfei in cooperation with Methanospirillum hungatei. Production of hydrogen (or formate) with electrons derived from butyrate oxidation is energetically unfavourable: the midpoint potential of the proton/hydrogen couple is raised to 2300 to 2250 mV if the methanogenic partner organisms keep the hydrogen concentration below 1024 atm hydrogen [1,2] This level can just be met by electrons delivered via NADH (E09 = 2320 mV [6]), and NAD+ is the electron acceptor in the second oxidation step in the butyrate pathway, from 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA to acetoacetyl-CoA (E09 = 2250 mV [7]) catalysed by an NAD+-dependent 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase [8,9]. To release these electrons as hydrogen or formate, it is assumed that S. wolfei has to sacrifice part of the energy that is conserved as ATP in the acetate kinase reaction into a ‘reversed electron transport’ [11]

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