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Environmental Microbiology

Enhancement of Nitrous Oxide Emissions in Soil Microbial Consortia via Copper Competition between Proteobacterial Methanotrophs and Denitrifiers

Jin Chang, Daehyun D. Kim, Jeremy D. Semrau, Ju Yong Lee, Hokwan Heo, Wenyu Gu, Sukhwan Yoon
Hideaki Nojiri, Editor
Jin Chang
aDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea
bDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
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Daehyun D. Kim
aDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea
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Jeremy D. Semrau
bDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
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Ju Yong Lee
aDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea
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Hokwan Heo
aDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea
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Wenyu Gu
bDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
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Sukhwan Yoon
aDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea
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  • ORCID record for Sukhwan Yoon
Hideaki Nojiri
University of Tokyo
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DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02301-20
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ABSTRACT

Unique means of copper scavenging have been identified in proteobacterial methanotrophs, particularly the use of methanobactin, a novel ribosomally synthesized, post-translationally modified polypeptide that binds copper with very high affinity. The possibility that copper sequestration strategies of methanotrophs may interfere with copper uptake of denitrifiers in situ and thereby enhance N2O emissions was examined using a suite of laboratory experiments performed with rice paddy microbial consortia. Addition of purified methanobactin from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b to denitrifying rice paddy soil microbial consortia resulted in substantially increased N2O production, with more pronounced responses observed for soils with lower copper content. The N2O emission-enhancing effect of the soil’s native mbnA-expressing Methylocystaceae methanotrophs on the native denitrifiers was then experimentally verified with a Methylocystaceae-dominant chemostat culture prepared from a rice paddy microbial consortium as the inoculum. Finally, with microcosms amended with various cell numbers of methanobactin-producing Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b before CH4 enrichment, microbiomes with different ratios of methanobactin-producing Methylocystaceae to gammaproteobacterial methanotrophs incapable of methanobactin production were simulated. Significant enhancement of N2O production from denitrification was evident in both Methylocystaceae-dominant and Methylococcaceae-dominant enrichments, albeit to a greater extent in the former, signifying the comparative potency of methanobactin-mediated copper sequestration, while implying the presence of alternative copper abstraction mechanisms for Methylococcaceae. These observations support that copper-mediated methanotrophic enhancement of N2O production from denitrification is plausible where methanotrophs and denitrifiers cohabit.

IMPORTANCE Proteobacterial methanotrophs—groups of microorganisms that utilize methane as a source of energy and carbon—have been known to employ unique mechanisms to scavenge copper, namely, utilization of methanobactin, a polypeptide that binds copper with high affinity and specificity. Previously the possibility that copper sequestration by methanotrophs may lead to alteration of cuproenzyme-mediated reactions in denitrifiers and consequently increase emission of potent greenhouse gas N2O has been suggested in axenic and coculture experiments. Here, a suite of experiments with rice paddy soil slurry cultures with complex microbial compositions were performed to corroborate that such copper-mediated interplay may actually take place in environments cohabited by diverse methanotrophs and denitrifiers. As spatial and temporal heterogeneity allows for spatial coexistence of methanotrophy (aerobic) and denitrification (anaerobic) in soils, the results from this study suggest that this previously unidentified mechanism of N2O production may account for a significant proportion of N2O efflux from agricultural soils.

FOOTNOTES

    • Received 19 September 2020.
    • Accepted 9 December 2020.
    • Accepted manuscript posted online 18 December 2020.
  • Supplemental material is available online only.

  • Copyright © 2021 American Society for Microbiology.

All Rights Reserved.

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Enhancement of Nitrous Oxide Emissions in Soil Microbial Consortia via Copper Competition between Proteobacterial Methanotrophs and Denitrifiers
Jin Chang, Daehyun D. Kim, Jeremy D. Semrau, Ju Yong Lee, Hokwan Heo, Wenyu Gu, Sukhwan Yoon
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Feb 2021, 87 (5) e02301-20; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02301-20

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Enhancement of Nitrous Oxide Emissions in Soil Microbial Consortia via Copper Competition between Proteobacterial Methanotrophs and Denitrifiers
Jin Chang, Daehyun D. Kim, Jeremy D. Semrau, Ju Yong Lee, Hokwan Heo, Wenyu Gu, Sukhwan Yoon
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Feb 2021, 87 (5) e02301-20; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02301-20
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KEYWORDS

copper
denitrification
methanobactin
methanotrophs
nitrous oxide

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