ARPHA Conference Abstracts :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Jonathan Gropp (ja.gropp@gmail.com)
Received: 24 Jun 2023 | Published: 16 Oct 2023
© 2023 Jonathan Gropp, Markus Bill, Daniel Stolper, Dipti Nayak
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Gropp J, Bill M, Stolper DA, Nayak DD (2023) Studying the isotopic composition of microbial methane with a genetically-tractable methanogen. ARPHA Conference Abstracts 6: e108567. https://doi.org/10.3897/aca.6.e108567
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Nearly all biogenic methane is produced by a group of microorganisms called methanogenic archaea (or methanogens). Methanogens can use a variety of substrates, such as H2 + CO2, acetate, and methylated compounds, for methanogenesis. Previous studies have shown that the stable carbon and hydrogen isotopic compositions of methane produced by methanogens can vary drastically depending on the substrate composition and concentration in the environment. For instance, the concentration of H2 in the environment has a substantial impact on the isotopic composition of methane derived from hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis (reduction of CO2 to methane using H2 as the electron donor) (
The methanogen M. acetivorans grows on a wide variety of compounds such as acetate, methanol, methylamines, and methylsulfides. We found that the methylotrophic pathways (for methanol and trimethylamine) and the aceticlastic pathway have large and similar primary hydrogen isotopic effects (α of ~0.45). These data are in contrast to previous findings and imply a minor isotopic exchange between CH4 and H2O (
methane, isotopes, CRISPR/Cas9, clumped
Jonathan Gropp