Abstract

Biological methane oxidation is a globally relevant process that mediates the flux of an important greenhouse gas through both aerobic and anaerobic metabolic pathways. However, measuring these metabolic rates presents many obstacles, from logistical barriers to regulatory hurdles and poor precision. Here we present a new approach for investigating microbial methane metabolism based on hydrogen atom dynamics, which is complementary to carbon-focused assessments of methanotrophy. The method uses monodeuterated methane (CH3D) as a metabolic substrate, quantifying the aqueous D/H ratio over time using off-axis integrated cavity output spectroscopy. This approach represents a nontoxic, comparatively rapid, and straightforward approach that supplements existing radiotopic and stable carbon isotopic methods; by probing hydrogen atoms, it offers an additional dimension for examining rates and pathways of methane metabolism. We provide direct comparisons between the CH3D procedure and the well-established 14CH4 radiotracer method for several methanotrophic systems, including type I and II aerobic methanotroph cultures and methane-seep sediment slurries and carbonate rocks under anoxic and oxic incubation conditions. In all applications tested, methane consumption values calculated via the CH3D method were directly and consistently proportional to 14C radiolabel-derived methane oxidation rates. We also employed this method in a nontraditional experimental setup, using flexible, gas-impermeable bags to investigate the role of pressure on seep sediment methane oxidation rates. Results revealed an 80% increase over atmospheric pressure in methanotrophic rates the equivalent of ~900-m water depth, highlighting the importance of this parameter on methane metabolism and exhibiting the flexibility of the newly described method. IMPORTANCE Microbial methane consumption is a critical component of the global carbon cycle, with wide-ranging implications for climate regulation and hydrocarbon exploitation. Nonetheless, quantifying methane metabolism typically involves logistically challenging methods and/or specialized equipment; these impediments have limited our understanding of methane fluxes and reservoirs in natural systems, making effective management difficult. Here, we offer an easily implementable, precise method using monodeuterated methane (CH3D) that advances three specific aims. First, it allows users to directly compare methane consumption rates between different experimental treatments of the same inoculum. Second, by empirically linking the CH3D procedure with the well-established 14C radiocarbon approach, we determine absolute scaling factors that facilitate rate measurements for several aerobic and anaerobic systems of interest. Third, CH3D represents a helpful tool in evaluating the relationship between methane activation and full oxidation in methanotrophic metabolisms. The procedural advantages, consistency, and novel research questions enabled by the CH3D method should prove useful in a wide range of culture-based and environmental microbial systems to further elucidate methane metabolism dynamics.

Highlights

  • Biological methane oxidation is a globally relevant process that mediates the flux of an important greenhouse gas through both aerobic and anaerobic metabolic pathways

  • The type II alphaproteobacterial methanotroph M. trichosporium exhibited methane consumption rates more than an order of magnitude greater than those of M. sedimenti, yet the scaling factor relating the CH3D- and 14CH4-derived rates was remarkably consistent in both cases

  • The M. trichosporium rate value calculated from the CH3D experimental treatment point (47.5 h, 4.16 ϫ 104 nmol of methane consumed) was compared with the rate determined from the 14CH4 experimental treatment point (47.5 h, 2.78 ϫ 104 nmol of methane consumed), yielding a scaling factor of 1.5 for exponential-phase growth

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Summary

Introduction

Biological methane oxidation is a globally relevant process that mediates the flux of an important greenhouse gas through both aerobic and anaerobic metabolic pathways. Measuring these metabolic rates presents many obstacles, from logistical barriers to regulatory hurdles and poor precision. The method uses monodeuterated methane (CH3D) as a metabolic substrate, quantifying the aqueous D/H ratio over time using off-axis integrated cavity output spectroscopy This approach represents a nontoxic, comparatively rapid, and straightforward approach that supplements existing radiotopic and stable carbon isotopic methods; by probing hydrogen atoms, it offers an additional dimension for examining rates and pathways of methane metabolism. Methane is converted to methanol, which is further oxidized to formaldehyde; assimilatory pathways branching at this point can incorporate carbon into central metabolism through the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle (type I and type X methanotrophs) or the serine cycle (type II)

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