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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2007, p. 4171-4179, Vol. 73, No. 13
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02810-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Steven T. Petsch,2*
Anna M. Martini,3 and
Klaus Nüsslein1
Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003,1 Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003,2 Department of Geology, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts 010023
Received 1 December 2006/ Accepted 17 April 2007
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1,000 mM. Most-probable-number series revealed differences in methanogen substrate utilization (acetate, trimethylamine, or H2/CO2) associated with chlorinity. The greatest methane production in enrichment cultures was observed for incubations with salinity at or close to the native pore water salinity of the inoculum. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses of archaeal 16S rRNA genes from seven wells indicated that there were links between archaeal communities and pore water salinity. Archaeal clone libraries constructed from sequences from 16S rRNA genes isolated from two wells revealed phylotypes similar to a halophilic methylotrophic Methanohalophilus species and a hydrogenotrophic Methanoplanus species at high salinity and a single phylotype closely related to Methanocorpusculum bavaricum at low salinity. These results show that several distinct communities of methanogens persist in this subsurface, CH4-producing environment and that each community is adapted to particular conditions of salinity and preferential substrate use and each community induces distinct geochemical signatures in shale formation waters. |
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600-km-wide, 4-km-deep stratigraphic basin comprising sedimentary rocks ranging from 540 to 145 million years old. Within the rock formations of the basin is the
380-million-year-old Antrim Shale, a fine-grained, laminated shale with high concentrations of organic carbon and pyrite. Intense natural gas production has been developed along the northern margin of the basin, where CH4 abundance is greatest; at present, over 10,000 gas- and water-producing wells have been installed in the Antrim Shale along a 50 km-wide north-south band extending across the entire Lower Peninsula of Michigan (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Map of study area in northern Michigan, showing the locations of wells used in this study and wells examined in a previous geochemical study, the contours of the Cl concentration within Antrim Shale formation waters, and the subcrop of Antrim Shale beneath glacial till.
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13C ratios for coproduced CO2 and CH4 (31).
Antrim Shale pore waters exhibit a sharp salinity gradient ranging from extremely dilute water along the margins of the basin to an NaCl concentration greater than 5 M at the center of the basin (30). The dissolved salts are dominated by chloride and sodium, with lesser contributions from Mg, Ca, and bicarbonate (30). Fluid flow and diffusion are restricted in the Antrim Shale due to very low matrix porosity (34, 35). The salinity gradient in the pore waters appears to correlate with methane production, and there is extremely limited CH4 production from wells with salinity above
4 M Cl. Low salinity in the Antrim Shale results from dilution of deep basin brines with meteoric waters, associated with deep groundwater recharge during Pleistocene glaciation events (34). As Antrim Shale CH4 is isotopically linked with glacial-age waters, methanogenesis in the Antrim Shale may be a geologically recent occurrence (30).
While many methanogens are inhibited by increased NaCl concentrations (5, 26, 36, 47), there are halophilic methanogens that use methanol, methylamine compounds, or dimethyl sulfide to generate methane (43). These substrates yield more energy (78.7 to 191.1 kJ per mol substrate) than H2/CO2 (34 kJ/mol substrate) or acetate (31 kJ mol substrate), which likely allows methylotrophic methanogens to grow at higher salt concentrations by offsetting the energy cost of the increased osmoregulatory burden (44). In subsurface settings, hydrogenotrophic and acetoclastic methanogens are more commonly described (6, 13, 20, 22, 45, 56) but generally are limited to lower-salinity environments than methanogens capable of using methanol and methylamines (5, 40). Methanocalculus halotolerans is the most halotolerant hydrogenotrophic methanogen known and can survive NaCl concentrations in culture of up to
2.3 M (40); this organism was isolated from oil field brine with 2,175 mM NaCl. Acetoclastic methanogenesis persists at Cl concentrations up to
1,000 mM, but halotolerance data for the methanogens are scarce (44).
The purpose of this study was to investigate if the diversity of methanogens in the Antrim Shale is associated with salinity. The methane-producing zone in the Antrim Shale covers the entire salinity range known to support methanogenesis, from freshwater to water containing 4,000 mM Cl. Bacterial rRNA gene sequencing efforts for the Antrim Shale have shown that a variety of fermentative, syntrophic, and homoacetogenic bacteria inhabit the shale (32; M. L. Formolo, A. M. Martini, K. Nüsslein, J. Salacup, and S. T. Petsch, submitted for publication). These organisms are believed to convert bioavailable components of shale organic matter into substrates for methanogenesis, such as H2, CO2, acetate, and methylamines. Because different methanogens require different substrates (acetate, H2, methanol, methylamines), salinity may indirectly control the diversity of organisms responsible for decomposition of shale organic matter and production of substrates necessary for methanogenesis. As the Antrim Shale represents a methane source that may prove to be critical for both ancient climate change and modern resource recovery, salinity constraints on methanogenesis are critical for understanding this and other accumulations of biogenic methane in sedimentary basins.
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Enrichment cultures.
Medium for the enrichment of Antrim Shale microorganisms was developed to mimic the geochemistry of water collected from methane-producing Antrim Shale wells. The media consisted of a degassed basal salts solution containing CaCl2·2H2O (3.6 mM), MgCl2·6H2O (1.6 mM), NH4Cl (1.87 mM), KH2PO4 (0.73 mM), NaBr (0.23 mM), NaHCO3 (25 mM), trace vitamin and mineral solutions (DSMZ media 141 and 318, respectively) (http://www.dsmz.de/), and resazurin (1 mg/liter) and were buffered with 2-morpholinoethanesulfonic acid (10 mM) to pH 6.1. General enrichment media contained the following organic carbon sources: sodium acetate (10 mM), sodium formate (1 mM), trimethylamine (10 mM), methanol (50 mM), yeast extract (0.1%), and tryptic peptone (0.1%). Other than CO2, no external electron acceptors were supplied. Fifteen milliliters of medium was dispensed into 50-ml glass serum bottles, which were capped with butyl rubber stoppers. The medium was degassed by sparging with 80:20 N2/CO2. Fifteen milliliters of medium was dispensed into 50-ml glass serum bottles, which were capped with butyl rubber stoppers and autoclaved, and then the medium was reduced by addition of Na2S·9H2O and cysteine (0.03% each). The headspace was pressurized to 160 kPa with 80:20 H2/CO2 to approximate the measured pore water alkalinity. To determine the methane production and salinity tolerance of different communities along the salinity gradient, a suite of enrichments for fermentative and methanogenic organisms was established by amending the general enrichment medium with NaCl at concentrations of 20, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1,000, 1,500, 2,000, 2,500, and 4,000 mM. Enrichments were inoculated with 1% (vol/vol) Antrim Shale well water at the wellhead. Thus, well water samples were dispensed into medium at each salinity, yielding a matrix of well salinity/enrichment salinity incubations. All incubations occurred at 17°C in the dark and were maintained in triplicate for 6 months.
MPN series.
MPN dilutions were employed to determine the relative numbers of viable, culturable methanogens capable of using different methanogenic substrates present in two wells (well C, 200 mM Cl; well D, 1,041 mM Cl). The medium was set up as described above, except that the carbon sources were limited to 0.005% yeast extract and one of the following: sodium acetate (10 mM), trimethylamine (10 mM), or 80:20 H2/CO2 at 160 kPa overpressure in the headspace. Dilutions without H2/CO2 were overpressured with 160 kPa N2/CO2. NaCl concentrations were amended to approximate field conditions, and pore water was serially diluted from 1:10 to 1:10,000. Preparations were kept at room temperature in the dark for 2 months. Growth of methanogens was confirmed by microscopic analysis and by determining the increase in the headspace methane concentration (see "Geochemical analyses" below), and MPN series cell densities were calculated based on dilution to extinction using the software MPN Calculator (version VB6; http://www.i2workout.com/mcuriale/mpn/index.html).
Enumeration of cells.
Fixed filters containing cellular material were removed from Swinnex filter holders, mounted in a glass vacuum filter holder, and wetted with 1 ml phosphate-buffered saline solution. A vacuum was applied to near dryness, and filters were then stained with 500 µl of a 1-µg/ml DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) solution in phosphate-buffered saline solution in the dark for 2 min. The filters were washed in 10 ml phosphate-buffered saline solution to remove excess DAPI, dried by applying a gentle vacuum, and examined by epifluorescence microscopy. Cell counts were expressed as the average and standard deviation for 20 field counts per slide, using a 100-µm-diameter field area, a 24-mm-diameter filter area, and 60 ml (total volume) of a filtered water sample. The presence of strongly fluorescing methanogens was confirmed on unstained filters as autofluorescence of cells by excitation at 420 nm; as several groups of methanogens, especially those that utilize acetate and methylated substrate, contain only low levels of the F420 cofactor, these groups are underrepresented by autofluorescence analysis.
DNA extraction and amplification.
DNA was extracted from filters from each well using a QIAamp DNA stool mini kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) and a modified procedure. Briefly, filters were incubated in ASL lysis buffer (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) at 90°C for 8 min and then vortexed for 20 s. Each filter was removed from the buffer, and for the remaining procedure the protocol provided by QIAGEN was used. DNA was quantified spectrophotometrically using a low-volume system (Nano-Drop, Wilmington, DE) and used at full strength in subsequent PCRs. For a positive control, DNA was extracted from Methanosarcina barkeri DSM 800T (Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany) by the same methods. Nucleic acid was successfully extracted from seven of the eight wells. No nucleic acid was recovered from the most saline well sample; extraction of new blank filters also yielded no nucleic acid.
Archaeal 16S rRNA genes from each well and from the M. barkeri control extract were amplified using a nested PCR approach. The first round of PCR used the Archaea-specific primer 21F (5'-TCC GGT TGA TCC YGC C-3') (8) and the universal primer 1492R (5'-TAC GGY TAC CTT GTT ACG ACT T-3') (55). The second round used Archaea-specific primers 109F (5'-ACK GCT CAG TAA CAC GT-3') and 915R (5'-GTG CTC CCC CGC CAA TTC CT-3') (14). One microliter of sample DNA was used as the template in a 30-µl PCR cocktail containing 2 mM MgCl2 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), 0.50 µM forward and reverse primers (IDT, Coralville, IA), 0.08 U/µl Taq polymerase, 400 ng/µl bovine serum albumin, and 0.25 mM of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (all obtained from Promega, Madison, WI). Reactions were performed in a Mastercycler Personal 5332 thermocycler (Eppendorf, Westbury, NY) with the following program: 95°C for 3 min; 30 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min; and 72°C for 10 min. The resulting PCR product (826 bp) was quantified by comparison to a 100-kb DNA ladder (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA) and was gel purified using a MinElute gel extraction kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA).
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis.
PCR products of 16S rRNA genes obtained from each well and from the M. barkeri control were digested with restriction enzyme HhaI, MspII, or MnlI or a combination of HhaI and MnlI (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA) by following the manufacturer's instructions and were electrophoretically separated on an 8% polyacrylamide gel. Gels were stained with 5x SYBR green 1 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA), visualized under UV light, and photographed. Bands were identified on each gel and summarized into a matrix form where rows consisted of well names and columns indicated base sequence length corresponding to individual bands from each restriction digest, determined by comparison with a 100-bp ladder (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA). A value of 1 or 0, indicating the presence or absence of a band, respectively, was entered into each cell. Cluster analysis was performed using a Sorensen index distance measure and the nearest-neighbor linkage method based on the software package PC-ORD v. 4.30 (33).
Phylogenetic analysis.
PCR products from well B (12.8 mM Cl) and well G (2,269 mM Cl) were chosen for cloning and sequencing. DNA extraction and nested PCR amplification of the 16S rRNA gene were performed as described above, with PCRs using a DNA template from each well performed in triplicate and subsequently pooled. PCR products were cloned into Escherichia coli JM109 competent cells using a pGEM-T Easy vector system (Promega, Madison, WI) according to the manufacturer's instructions. DNA from 150 randomly picked clones was sequenced with primer 21F using a 3730xl DNA analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Inc., Foster City, CA). Sequences were manually edited in Chromas v2.31 (Technelysium Pty. Ltd., Tewantin, Queensland, Australia) and were aligned using the program ClustalX v. 1.83 (52) in the software package BioEdit v.7.0.5 (15). Chimeric sequences were identified using Bellerophon (17), the Chimera_Check program from the Ribosomal Database Project (28), and the software package Mallard (3). Sequences found to be of potential chimeric origin through the analyses described above were excluded from further examination. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were assigned using the program DOTUR (48) and a 97% sequence similarity criterion for identical phylotypes. The nearest relative of each OTU was determined by a BLAST search against the NCBI 16S rRNA GenBank database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/). Minimum-evolution trees using a Tamura-Nei substitution model were created, and a bootstrap test of phylogeny with 1,000 replicates was performed using the software MEGA v.3.1 (23). SACE and SChao1, which estimate the diversity present in the environment based on sampling, and rarefaction curves were calculated using DOTUR (48).
Geochemical analyses.
Anions in water samples were analyzed by ion chromatography using an AS14 anion column with suppressed conductivity detection (Dionex, Marlton, NJ). Cations were analyzed by inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (Teledyne-Leeman Labs, Hudson, NH). Concentrations of cations and anions were determined by comparison with gravimetric standards. Alkalinity was determined by endpoint titration, performed within hours of sample collection (12). Concentrations of enrichment culture headspace methane were measured by gas chromatography using a GC-8A (Shimadzu, Columbia, MD) equipped with a thermal conductivity detector and a 100/120 Carbosieve SII column (Supelco, St. Louis, MO) and were quantified by comparison with headspace standards. Total dissolved organic carbon concentrations were determined by catalytic high-temperature combustion using a Shimadzu TOC-VCPH carbon analyzer (Shimadzu USA, Columbia, MD). Acetate concentrations in water samples were determined by solid-phase microextraction/gas chromatography using a method adapted from the method of Ábalos et al. (1). Briefly, volatile fatty acids in an acidified pore water sample were adsorbed to a Carbo-Wax fused-silica fiber and injected into an HP 6890 gas chromatograph equipped with a 30-m NUKOL capillary column and a flame ionization detector; quantification was achieved by comparison with volumetric standards of sodium acetate.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The phylotypes detected in this study are available from the GenBank nucleotide database (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) under accession numbers DQ830727 to DQ830735.
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7 are likely to be overestimates of the real subsurface conditions. Modeling of the formation water pH using measured water chemistry and Geochemist's Workbench software (Rockware Inc., Golden, CO) predicts a pH range between 5.6 and 7.0. Nonetheless, pH does vary with salinity in this environment and may be responsible for some component of community variability. All wells lacked measurable concentrations of nitrate. The total dissolved Fe concentrations ranged from submicromolar to 2,397 µM, and there was a sharp decrease in the Fe concentration in wells with Cl concentrations less than 1,000 mM. At circumneutral pH, an appreciable concentration of dissolved free Fe(III) is not supported. A limited amount of total Fe in solution may occur as chelated Fe(III) associated with dissolved organic matter. However, ample pyrite in the shale should buffer the electrochemical potential and preclude accumulation of ferric iron species, and the total dissolved Fe concentrations were greater than the dissolved organic carbon concentrations in all wells with water containing more than 1,000 mM Cl. The two wells with the lowest salinity exhibited submillimolar SO42 concentrations; the SO42 concentration was below the detection limit,
25 µM, in the remaining six wells. With the exception of well B (170 µM SO42), the characteristic aroma of H2S was absent in all well samples. The alkalinity ranged from 6.3 to 39.5 meq liter and was negatively correlated with the Cl concentration (r2 = 0.94). Acetate was detected in four of eight water samples (detection limit,
5 µM) at concentrations ranging from 57 to 549 µM. No acetate was detected in wells with water containing less than 1,000 mM Cl. Thus, while a biological source of acetate in these wells was supported, acetate consumption appeared to be inhibited at higher salinities. The lack of measurable acetate in the well with the highest salinity is consistent with a lack of biological activity at this highly saline site. |
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TABLE 1. Sample information, geochemical data, direct cell counts, and nucleic acid extraction
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FIG. 2. Methane concentrations in enrichments derived from six wells along the Antrim Shale salinity gradient, measured 6 months after initiation. No methane was detected in enrichments derived from highly saline well H (data not shown). The wells and chlorinities of shale pore waters from which enrichments were initiated are indicated.
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FIG. 3. Chloride concentrations of pore waters from seven wells along a salinity gradient compared to the chloride concentrations of the enrichments with the greatest methane production (highest values for seven chloride concentrations in enrichments). No methane was detected in any incubation derived from well H.
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MPN series.
MPN enrichments for medium-low-salinity well C (200 mM Cl) and medium-high-salinity well D (1,041 mM Cl) yielded low counts of culturable cells for all three methanogen substrates examined (Table 2). The numbers of culturable cells are much lower than the direct counts. However, epifluorescence microscopy of fixed water sample filters showed that only 1 to 5% of the total cell population exhibited autofluorescence, indicating that strongly fluorescing methanogens comprised only a small fraction of the total microbial community. Methanogens that grew in the presence of acetate, H2, or trimethylamine could all be cultured from well C, and the greatest number of cells were able to use H2. The relatively high number of cells cultured using trimethylamine may reflect the substrate versatility of many members of the Methanosarcinales (as suggested by cloning results presented below) and may not reflect the fact that trimethylamine is an available substrate in this environment. Note that the low-salinity well used as a sample source for the MPN series (well C) is not the same well that was used for 16S rRNA gene analysis (well B). MPN series showed growth only on trimethylamine for the higher-salinity well D. The limited growth in MPN series dilutions for well D is surprising given the relatively high methane production observed in enrichment cultures derived from this well (Fig. 2). Negative controls which contained only 0.005% yeast extract as a carbon source did not yield any methane.
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TABLE 2. MPN dilution series results, expressed as the estimated range of cell concentrations at the 95% confidence level determined by using MPN Calculator (version VB6)a
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FIG. 4. Distance dendrogram based on RFLP analyses of archaeal 16S rRNA genes from eight sampled wells. The chloride concentration determined for each well is indicated in parentheses. The distance bar indicates the proportion of unique RFLP fragments for two wells.
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Phylogenetic analysis placed all clones within the Euryarchaeota (Fig. 5). A single archaeal phylotype was observed for well B and grouped within the Methanomicrobiales; the estimated diversity is 1 (SChao1, 100% coverage). This phylotype was closely related to the cultured methanogen Methanocorpusculum bavaricum, with up to 99.5% sequence similarity. Members of the family Methanocorpusculaceae exhibit metabolic versatility and are known to use H2/CO2, formate, and some secondary alcohols to make methane (59). The MPN series for well C indicated use of acetate and trimethylamine substrates, functions which are unknown among the Methanocorpusculaceae. Although wells B and C exhibit similar salinities and pHs, they are separated by 25 km. Thus, we cannot rule out the possibility that these wells contain different communities with different substrate requirements. Sequences related to known acetoclastic methanogens were not found in the well B library.
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FIG. 5. Distance tree for archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences from well B (12.8 mM Cl) and well G (2,269 mM Cl) (bold type) compared with closely related sequences and reference strains. The numbers of clones of the same phylotype are indicated in parentheses. The scale bar represents 5% estimated sequence divergence. Bootstrap values (n = 1,000) are indicated at the nodes.
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Two distinct groups of well G clones had no cultured relatives. Uncultured Archaea group I consisted of two sequences that were 96% similar to each other but had less than 77% identity with other sequences in the current NCBI database (Fig. 5). The closest related sequences belonged to a clone from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent eukaryotic group sequenced from a subseafloor core (up to 73% similarity) (18) and an environmental sequence from a gas-rich mud volcano in the eastern Mediterranean (up to 76% similarity). Uncultured Archaea group II consisted of a single phylotype of six clones (Fig. 5), whose closest relatives were sequenced from other methane-rich environments, including two different eastern Mediterranean mud volcanoes (up to 91 and 92% sequence similarity) (16), a microbial mat at a hydrothermal vent in the Guaymas Basin (92% similarity) (9), and a sulfidic methane spring in Oklahoma (83% similarity) (10).
Rarefaction curves of the two libraries indicated that clones obtained from well B had been adequately sampled to cover the existing diversity, while well G requires greater sampling to exhaustively describe the community (data not shown). This agrees with the calculated estimates of community richness SChao1 and SACE. The coverage of sampling was estimated as the percentage of identified OTUs relative to the estimated total richness. Due to the lack of diversity in well B, an SACE value for diversity could not be calculated.
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The absence of 16S rRNA gene sequences related to acetoclastic methanogens in well B was surprising since the low salinity of the pore waters coupled with an environment conducive to fermentation should theoretically support acetoclastic growth. Sequences closely related to known acetoclastic methanogens have been recovered from both low-temperature (13) and high-temperature (45) petroleum reservoirs, as well as in subsurface sedimentary environments (56). 16S rRNA gene sequences that are closely related to Methanosaeta concilii were obtained from low-salinity Antrim Shale wells in a previous study (32; Formolo et al., submitted). Due to the low levels of sulfate in well B (
170 µM), it is possible that sulfate-reducing bacteria are present and outcompete the methanogens for acetate in the pore waters. Acetate is more likely to be a competitive methanogenic substrate at this salinity level, and unlike the situation at high-salinity sites, the noncompetitive substrates methanol, methylated amines, and dimethyl sulfide might not sufficiently support species with a methylotrophic affinity (41). The presence of sulfate in low-salinity Antrim Shale pore waters is a recent occurrence related to industrial-scale dewatering of the Antrim Shale and introduction of water from an underlying sulfate-bearing formation, as sulfate was not detected in this or other high-alkalinity Antrim Shale wells during the previous decade of monitoring of formation water chemistry (30, 32, 34).
The cluster of 16S rRNA gene sequences related to M. petrolearius from well G was also surprising, since the chloride concentration of this well (2,268 mM Cl) is above the known limit for hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis in culture (2,050 mM Cl) (40). Although the presence of a 16S rRNA gene sequence does not imply the level of activity or ecological niche, if this phylotype is currently active and utilizing H2 and CO2 to make methane, then this would be the highest known salinity at which hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis can occur. Cultivation and growth range experiments are needed to determine the salinity tolerance and methanogenic substrate use for this organism.
Many factors point to hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis as the main mode of producing methane in the Antrim Shale. Large groups of sequences related to hydrogen-utilizing methanogens were found in clone libraries from both saline and freshwater pore waters. Although enhancement of methanogenesis by a given compound in an enrichment does not mean that the compound is important in this ecosystem, the largest number of methanogens could be cultured with H2 as the electron donor. The
13C ratios for methane and carbon dioxide and the
D ratios for methane and water also indicate that methanogenesis using H2 is the dominant mode occurring in the basin (31, 32). However, the use of acetate and methyl compounds by methanogens should not be overlooked. In the absence of terminal electron acceptors such as sulfate or ferric iron, fermentation or respiration that employs components of shale organic matter as electron acceptors is likely to be an important mechanism of organic matter degradation in the Antrim Shale; both of these mechanisms may yield acetate. Acetate concentrations were below the detection levels in pore waters with chloride levels below 1,000 mM Cl, indicating that acetate is consumed in all but the most saline wells. Acetate would build up in these waters unless acetoclastic methanogens (or possibly sulfate reducers in well B) were consuming it. Sequences closely related to methylotrophic methanogens have been identified in Antrim Shale waters; such organisms are likely to be active in pore waters where H2 use by methanogens is inhibited by high salinity or where methyl compounds are generated.
The presence of close relatives of methylotrophic methanogens in the more saline well G suggests a source of the methylamines, methylsulfides, or primary alcohols in this environment. Environmental or geochemical sources of methylamines are not well described, but one possible source is betaine fermentation. In hypersaline environments, betaine is a common osmoregulatory compound synthesized at high concentrations by certain halophilic bacteria (42). Betaine can be fermented to yield acetate and trimethylamine by a variety of fermentative bacteria, including halophilic acetogens and other halophiles (19, 37, 53). Specifically, it has been demonstrated that a methanogen fermenter coculture of Methanohalophilus sp. strain Z-7302 and Acetohalobium arabaticum grown on betaine produces acetate and methane as its only products, presenting a possible trophic link for the hypersaline subsurface pore waters (60).
Regardless of substrate choice or salinity tolerance, the archaeal communities in the Antrim Shale all have the same overall role of generating methane. Yet in detail, each community has adapted to, and exhibits optimum methane generation within, a narrow range of salinities, and the substrates employed in methanogenesis differ in these communities. This observation is critical in guiding exploration of other subsurface environments where methanogenesis may occur. While methanogenesis may develop in environments ranging from freshwater to environments containing more than 3 M Cl, the substrates that foster methanogenesis at lower salinity are not the same as the substrates used at a higher salinity. The anaerobic degradation of sedimentary organic matter, which may yield acetate, H2, methanol, and/or methylated amines, is a critical component tightly linked with pore water salinity in the subsurface generation of methane in sedimentary basins.
We acknowledge EnerVest Operating L.L.C. for kindly providing access to wells and especially Jeff Riling for his support in water sampling. We also thank Roger Huang and Matt Stevenson for excellent technical assistance, as well as Jim Holden, Javier Izquierdo, Vicente Gomez-Alvarez, and Lisa Stout for helpful discussions.
Published ahead of print on 27 April 2007. ![]()
Present address: Department of Microbiology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. ![]()
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