HomeScienceInsights into a 'hot' microbe that can grow on nitrogen

Insights into a ‘hot’ microbe that can grow on nitrogen


master mentalism tricks

Close view of Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus culture under the microscope (left) and in a culture flask (middle and right). These cells grow on nitrogen gas as the only source of nitrogen. If there is no nitrogen gas present, nothing grows (right). Credit: Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology have successfully enhanced cultivation of a microorganism that can fix nitrogen (N2) while producing methane (CH4) and ammonia (NH3) and investigated exciting details of its metabolism.

Carbon and nitrogen are essential elements of life. Some organisms take up key positions for the cycling of both of them—among them Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus. Behind the complicated name hides a complicated microbe. M. thermolithotrophicus is a marine heat-loving methanogen.

It lives in ocean sediments, from sandy coasts and salty marshes to the deep-sea, preferably at temperatures around 65 °C. It is able to turn nitrogen (N2) and carbon dioxide (CO2) into ammonia (NH3) and methane (CH4) by using hydrogen (H2). Both products, ammonia and methane, are very interesting for biotechnological applications in fertilizer and biofuels production.

Tristan Wagner and Nevena Maslać from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology have now managed to grow this microbe in a fermenter—a challenging endeavor.

“It is very complicated to provide the perfect conditions for this microbe to thrive while fixing N2—high temperatures, no oxygen and keeping an eye on hydrogen and carbon dioxide levels,” says Maslać, who carried out the research as part of her Ph.D. project. “But with some ingenuity and perseverance, we managed to make them thrive in our lab and reach the highest cell densities reported so far.”

Once the cultures were up and running, the scientists were able to investigate the physiology of the microbe in detail, and later on deepen their study by looking how the metabolism from the microbe adapts to the N2-fixation. “In close collaboration with our colleagues Chandni Sidhu and Hanno Teeling, we combined physiological tests and differential transcriptomics, which allowed us to dig deeper into the metabolism of M. thermolithotrophicus,” Maslać explains.

As improbable as a bumblebee

The metabolic abilities of M. thermolithotrophicus are puzzling: These microbes use methanogenesis, a metabolism that originated on the early anoxic Earth, to acquire their cellular energy. Compared to humans that use oxygen to transform glucose into carbon dioxide, methanogens obtain only a very limited amount of energy from methanogenesis. Paradoxically, fixing nitrogen requires gigantic amounts of energy, which would exhaust them.

“They are a bit like bumblebees, which are theoretically too heavy to fly but obviously do so, nevertheless,” says senior author Tristan Wagner, group leader of the Max Planck Research Group Microbial Metabolism. “Despite such energy limitation, these fascinating microbes have even been found to be the prime nitrogen fixers in some environments.”

A robust nitrogenase

The enzyme that organisms use to fix nitrogen is called nitrogenase. Most common nitrogenases require Molybdenum to perform the reaction. Molybdenum nitrogenase is well-studied in bacteria living as symbionts in plant roots. Their nitrogenase can be inhibited by tungstate.

Surprisingly, the Bremen scientists found that M. thermolithotrophicus is not disturbed by tungstate while growing on N2. “Our microbe was only dependent on molybdenum to fix N2 and not bothered by tungstate, which implies an adaptation of metal-acquisition systems, making it even more robust for different potential applications,” says Maslać.

Rethinking ammonia production

Nitrogen fixation, i.e., gaining nitrogen from N2, is the major process to insert nitrogen into the biological cycle. For industrial fertilizer production this process is carried out via the Haber-Bosch process, which artificially fixes nitrogen to produce ammonia with hydrogen under high temperatures and pressures. It is used to produce most of the world’s ammonia, an essential fertilizer to sustain global agriculture.

The Haber-Bosch process is extremely energy-demanding: It consumes 2% of the world’s energy output, and releasing at the same time up to 1.4% of global carbon emissions. Thus, people are looking for more sustainable alternatives to produce ammonia.

“The process used by M. thermolithotrophicus shows that out there in the microbial world there are still solutions that might allow for a more efficient production of ammonia, and that they can even be combined with biofuel production through methane,” says Wagner.

“With this study, we understood that under N2-fixing conditions, the methanogen sacrifices its production of proteins to favor nitrogen capture, a particularly smart strategy of energy reallocation,” Wagner sums up. “Our next step will be to move into the molecular details of the process and the enzymes involved, as well as to look into other parts of the organism’s metabolism.”

The research was published in mBio.

More information: Nevena Maslać et al, Comparative Transcriptomics Sheds Light on Remodeling of Gene Expression during Diazotrophy in the Thermophilic Methanogen Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus, mBio (2022). DOI: 10.1128/mbio.02443-22

Journal information: mBio

Provided by Max Planck Society

Citation: Insights into a ‘hot’ microbe that can grow on nitrogen while producing methane (2022, November 22) retrieved 3 December 2022 from https://phys.org/news/2022-11-insights-hot-microbe-nitrogen-methane.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Read The Full Article Here


trick photography
Advertisingfutmillion

Popular posts

Hollywood Spotlight: Director Jon Frenkel Garcia
The Dutchman Cast: André Holland, Zazie Beetz & More Join
The Creator Reactions: Gareth Edwards’ Latest Is One of 2023’s
Company Paid Critics For Rotten Tomatoes Reviews
‘Fire Country’ Sneak Peek: Sharon Gets Honest With Vince During
Anna Paquin Reveals Health Issues Have Not ‘Been Easy’ as
Why X-Men 97 is the Greatest Reboot of All Time
The 50 Best Historical Dramas: ‘Shirley,’ ‘The Chosen’ & More
Streaking in Tongues’ “Einstein’s Napkin”
Greye is Back With New Album
Universal Dice’s “Curse”
Society of the Silver Cross’ “Wife of the Sea”
9 Boob Tapes That Work For All Busts, Shapes, and
Here’s Why Apple Cider Vinegar Is the Ingredient Your Hair
I Travel a Lot for Work—These Are the Useful Items
The Best Street Style Looks From the Fall 2023 Couture
Physician by Day, Vigilante by Night in This Action-Packed Cyberpunk
10 Of The Best New Children’s Books Out April 2024
Interview with James Ungurait, Author of I’m The Same
Child Psychologist and Mother Shares CBT Teaching Techniques That Work
Positive associations between premenstrual disorders and perinatal depression
Poem: ‘SnapShot, 1968’
What is the smallest animal on Earth?
Experimental weight loss pill seems to be more potent than
Killing TikTok
Comedy or Tragedy?
BYD Atto 3 Electric SUV With Blade Battery Technology Launched
Bitcoin Falls to $19,000 in Anticipation of Tighter Fed Policy