Abstract

Linking the genomic content of uncultivated microbes to their metabolic functions remains a critical challenge in microbial ecology. Resolving this challenge has implications for improving our management of key microbial interactions in biotechnologies such as anaerobic digestion, which relies on slow-growing syntrophic and methanogenic communities to produce renewable methane from organic waste. In this study, we combined DNA stable-isotope probing (SIP) with genome-centric metagenomics to recover the genomes of populations enriched in 13C after growing on [13C]butyrate. Differential abundance analysis of recovered genomic bins across the SIP metagenomes identified two metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) that were significantly enriched in heavy [13C]DNA. Phylogenomic analysis assigned one MAG to the genus Syntrophomonas and the other MAG to the genus Methanothrix. Metabolic reconstruction of the annotated genomes showed that the Syntrophomonas genome encoded all the enzymes for beta-oxidizing butyrate, as well as several mechanisms for interspecies electron transfer via electron transfer flavoproteins, hydrogenases, and formate dehydrogenases. The Syntrophomonas genome shared low average nucleotide identity (<95%) with any cultured representative species, indicating that it is a novel species that plays a significant role in syntrophic butyrate degradation within anaerobic digesters. The Methanothrix genome contained the complete pathway for acetoclastic methanogenesis, indicating that it was enriched in 13C from syntrophic acetate transfer. This study demonstrates the potential of stable-isotope-informed genome-resolved metagenomics to identify in situ interspecies metabolic cooperation within syntrophic consortia important to anaerobic waste treatment as well as global carbon cycling.IMPORTANCE Predicting the metabolic potential and ecophysiology of mixed microbial communities remains a major challenge, especially for slow-growing anaerobes that are difficult to isolate. Unraveling the in situ metabolic activities of uncultured species may enable a more descriptive framework to model substrate transformations by microbiomes, which has broad implications for advancing the fields of biotechnology, global biogeochemistry, and human health. Here, we investigated the in situ function of mixed microbiomes by combining stable-isotope probing with metagenomics to identify the genomes of active syntrophic populations converting butyrate, a C4 fatty acid, into methane within anaerobic digesters. This approach thus moves beyond the mere presence of metabolic genes to resolve "who is doing what" by obtaining confirmatory assimilation of the labeled substrate into the DNA signature. Our findings provide a framework to further link the genomic identities of uncultured microbes with their ecological function within microbiomes driving many important biotechnological and global processes.

Highlights

  • Linking the genomic content of uncultivated microbes to their metabolic functions remains a critical challenge in microbial ecology

  • We demonstrated the potential of combining DNA–stable-isotope probing (DNA-SIP) with genome-resolved metagenomics to identify syntrophic populations degrading the long-chain fatty acid oleate (C18:1) within anaerobic digesters [11]

  • DNA-SIP-informed metagenomics confirmed that a majority of oleate-degrading bacteria in the two digesters belonged to Syntrophomonas [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Linking the genomic content of uncultivated microbes to their metabolic functions remains a critical challenge in microbial ecology. Only two mesophilic (Syntrophomonas and Syntrophus) and two thermophilic (Syntrophothermus and Thermosyntropha) genera (12 bacterial species in total) have been shown to oxidize butyrate in syntrophic cooperation with methanogenic archaea, and they all belong to the families Syntrophomonadaceae and Syntrophaceae [6] Despite their major roles in processing carbon within anaerobic bioreactors, many syntrophic fatty acid-oxidizing bacteria have evaded detection with quantitative hybridization-based techniques [7], which is likely due to their low biomass yields [8] or our incomplete knowledge of active syntrophic populations within anaerobic digesters [9]. We demonstrated that this approach was amenable for recovering high-quality microbial genomes using a differential coverage-based binning approach, as genomes from active microbes have msystems.asm.org 2

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