1 / 29

Case Study - Methanogens

Case Study - Methanogens. “Methane generators” Lab #10 Brock: 12E-17.4, 21.10, 24.10 11E-13.4, 17.17, 19.10 All are Archaea Genera have prefix “ Methano- ” E.g. Methanocaldococcus jannaschii Habitat: obligate anaerobes; rumen, sediments, landfills, colon, sewage. Habitat.

Télécharger la présentation

Case Study - Methanogens

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Case Study - Methanogens • “Methane generators” • Lab #10 • Brock: 12E-17.4, 21.10, 24.10 • 11E-13.4, 17.17, 19.10 • All are Archaea • Genera have prefix “Methano-” • E.g. Methanocaldococcusjannaschii • Habitat: obligate anaerobes; rumen, sediments, landfills, colon, sewage

  2. Habitat

  3. Volta Experiment

  4. Metabolism • Very slow, inefficient • CO2 is a very poor TEA

  5. Redox

  6. Substrates 12E:17.6 Three main categories of methanogens according to energy and electron sources

  7. Chemoorganoheterotrophy • Type 1 - Formic acid: • 4 HCOOH  CH4 + 3 CO2 + 2H2O (1:3) • Type 2 - Methylotrophic: • 4 CH3OH  3 CH4 + CO2 + 2 H2O (3:1) • Type 3 - Acetoclastic: • CH3COOH  CH4 + CO2 (1:1) • Part of the substrate used for energy, part for biosynthesis (biomass)

  8. Methanogens – Metabolism • E.g. Type 1 • CO2 + 4 H2 CH4 + 2 H2O (energy) • 8 H2 + 3 CO2 + CoA  acetyl-CoA + CH4 + 4 H2O + H+ (autotrophy - biomass) • CO2 serves as C-source and TEA

  9. Energy Production • Anaerobic Rs • No substrate-level phosphorylation • Unique series of co-factors used to reduce CO2 – last step produces PMF

  10. ETC

  11. ETC - Membrane

  12. CO2 Fixation • Via acetyl-CoA pathway • Unique type – methanogens only • Complex series of coenzymes, not found in other organisms

  13. The Rumen • An example of: • Microbial ecology • Animal-microbe symbiosis • Brock: 12E-24.10; (11E-19.11) • Digestive system in ruminants • Ruminants: two step digestive process (chew their cud) • Cattle, goats, sheep, camels, llamas, giraffes, bison, yaks, water buffalo, deer, wildebeest

  14. Cow

  15. Rumen • In cattle: ~ 100 L • 39oC; pH 5.8-6.8; anaerobic • Extensive biomass: • 1010 – 1011 cells/mL • 100 L (100,000 mL) • = 1016 – 1017 microbial cells • Vs. ~ 1013 cow cells • Diverse population – “a walking anaerobic incubator” • Bacteria, Archaea, fungi, protists

  16. Rumen • Inputs: mostly cellulose • Cows do not have cellulase to break down cellulose • Digestion carried out by normal microflora

  17. Substrates Common waste products from fermenters!

  18. Cellulose Breakdown

  19. Microbes Involved • Cellulase-producers • Fibrobacter succinogenes (Gram negative rod); cell-associated cellulase; capsule to adhere • Ruminococcus albus (Gram positive coccus); extracellular cellulase • Cellulose (and starch)  cellobiose and glucose

  20. Microbes Involved • Fermenters • E.g. E. coli, Bacteroides ruminicola (Gram negative rod), thousands of others (Bacteria, Archaea, yeasts, protists) • A variety of fermentation types, a variety of products

  21. Fermentation Products • Ethanol, alcohols • CO2 and H2 • Volatile fatty acids (VFAs) • Formic acid, acetic acid, propionic acid, butyric acid, etc. • Smell! • Some absorbed by cow, much is used by methanogens

  22. Microbes Involved • Methanogens • Convert CO2 and H2 to CH4 • Convert small VFAs (such as formate) to CH4 • Cow burps: ~ 65% CO2, 35% CH4 • Cannot use larger VFAs directly --> syntrophy

  23. Syntrophy • Two organisms combine their metabolic capabilities to catabolize a substance not capable of being catabolized by either one alone • VFAs (e.g. propionate, butyrate)  smaller compounds (formate, CO2 and H2)  used by methanogens

  24. Microbes Involved • Synotrophic bacteria • E.g. Syntrophomonas spp. • VFAs  formic acid, acetic acid, H2, etc. • Thermodynamically unfavourable • Methanogens scavenge up all the H2, thereby pulling reaction to the right (LeChatelier’s principle) • Interspecies hydrogen transfer

  25. Benefits to the Cow • VFAs absorbed through the rumen wall  carbon and energy source • Microbial biomass digested by the cow  nutrients (proteins, amino acids, nucleic acids, carbon and nitrogen source) • Vitamins

  26. Net Reaction: • Cellulose  CO2 + CH4 + biomass (cow and microbial; poop) • Cows produce ~ 100-500 L gas per day • 35% CH4, 65% CO2 • Currently about 1.5 billion cows

  27. Greenhouse Gases and Global Warming • Al Gore and the IPCC win Nobel Peace Prize • http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2007/10/12/nobel-peace.html?ref=rss • Methane is about 20-25x worse than CO2 (but present in much lower amounts)

  28. Global Methane • Rates

  29. Minimizing Ruminant Methane Production • Change cattle feed to lower methane production • Probiotics for cows (kangaroo poo news article) • Eat less beef…

More Related