Abstract

We evaluated the ability of the native microbiota in a low-temperature, sulfidic natural hydrocarbon seep (Zodletone) to metabolize short-chain hydrocarbons. n-Propane and n-pentane were metabolized under sulfate-reducing conditions in initial enrichments and in sediment-free subcultures. Carbon isotope analysis of residual propane in active enrichments showed that propane became enriched in (13)C by 6.7 (+/-2.0) per thousand, indicating a biological mechanism for propane loss. The detection of n-propylsuccinic and isopropylsuccinic acids in active propane-degrading enrichments provided evidence for anaerobic biodegradation via a fumarate addition pathway. A eubacterial 16S rRNA gene survey of sediment-free enrichments showed that the majority of the sequenced clones were phylogenetically affiliated within the Deltaproteobacteria. Such sequences were most closely affiliated with clones retrieved from hydrocarbon-impacted marine ecosystems, volatile fatty acid metabolizers, hydrogen users, and with a novel Deltaproteobacterial lineage. Other cloned sequences were affiliated with the Firmicutes and Chloroflexi phyla. The sequenced clones were only distantly (<95%) related to other reported low-molecular-weight alkane-degrading sulfate-reducing populations. This work documents the potential for anaerobic short-chain n-alkane metabolism for the first time in a terrestrial environment, provides evidence for a fumarate addition mechanism for n-propane activation under these conditions, and reveals microbial community members present in such enrichments.

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