Posted on 11/26/2007 1:18:22 PM PST by Red Badger
An international team of researchers has discovered a methane-consuming microorganism that lives in extremely acidic conditions. The bacterium could one day be used to reduce methane gas emissions from landfills. It could also help to cut methane emissions from geothermal power stations.
Aerobic methanotrophic bacteria (methanotrophs) consume methane diffusing away from methane-producing zones of soil and sediment. Some environments with active methane cyclessuch as marshes and peat bogsare very acidic; however, no cultured methanotroph grows optimally below pH 5. By contrast, the new bacterium is extremely acidophilic, and grows optimally at pH 2.0-2.5.
Unlike known methanotrophs, which belong to the phylum Proteobacteria, the new bacterium belongs to Verrucomicrobia. A paper on the new organism is published in the journal Nature.
Analysis of its draft genome detected genes encoding particulate methane monooxygenase that were homologous to genes found in methanotrophic proteobacteria. However, known genetic modules for methanol and formaldehyde oxidation were incomplete or missing, suggesting that the bacterium uses some novel methylotrophic pathways. Phylogenetic analysis of its three pmoA genes (encoding a subunit of particulate methane monooxygenase) placed them into a distinct cluster from proteobacterial homologues. This indicates an ancient divergence of Verrucomicrobia and Proteobacteria methanotrophs rather than a recent horizontal gene transfer of methanotrophic ability. The findings show that methanotrophy in the Bacteria is more taxonomically, ecologically and genetically diverse than previously thought, and that previous studies have failed to assess the full diversity of methanotrophs in acidic environments.
Globally, acidic environments generate significant quantities of methane. Scientists had suspected that a proportion of the methane generated by these sources was being consumed by bacteria living in the environments.
Our discovery has demonstrated that methane-consuming organisms do live in highly acidic environments. Without them, the amount of methane entering the atmosphere would be much greater. Ultimately, it may be possible to implant this organism, or a similar one, in landfills and cut methane emissions into the atmosphere. Matthew Stott, GNS Science
The researchers found the microorganism living in the Hells Gate geothermal areas in Rotorua, New Zealand. GNS Science microbiologist Peter Dunfield, who isolated the bacterium, has tentatively named it Methylokorus infernorum, which is a latinized description of its methane food source, the hellish location of its discovery, and also a description of a structure within its cell that resembles a Koru.
GNS Science worked with colleagues at the University of Hawaii to sequence the genome of the bacterium.
The discovery stems from a collaboration between GNS Science and the owner and operator of Hells Gate, Tikitere Trust. The agreement between the two organizations includes the sharing of any benefits that might accrue from scientific discoveries.
Resources
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Peter F. Dunfield et. al., Methane oxidation by an extremely acidophilic bacterium of the phylum Verrucomicrobia Nature advance online publication 14 November 2007 | doi:10.1038/nature06411
Obviously, a massive government program is needed to develop this, funded by an initial grant of $100 billion.
The search could take decades........
I think that I will never see a bacterium as lovely as a tree . . .
I'm picturing an Andromeda Strain situation; a bacteria gone wild that eats the world starting from the various methane producing buttocks of mammals and working it's way inside . . .
Not find, build.
Oh, yes, the pork projects could be endless...............
Under controlled conditions, it would revolutionize natural gas production (think energy, folks--these critters they are ballyhooing will eat it).
Only studying tree rings will tell how long!
If it eats methane, what does it fart?
Crisp mountain air.
I just reduce my acidic methane producing environment with a Tums.
I almost choked on my coffee.......
I wonder what happens when this critter gets loose in our natural gas supply!
Yup. Seems far easier, especially with the new Stirling engine-based generators/cogen sets coming on-line.
Plus methanotrophs require oxygen to be pumped down to them if one is trying to remediate a landfill - not a cheap or simple task.
Gastrointestinal Heinie Gas Emissions, perhaps?
I thought methane was tapped at garbage dumps to generate electricity. Isn’t this a little counterproductive?
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