TY - JOUR
T1 - Bacterial aerobic methane cycling by the marine sponge-associated microbiome
AU - Ramírez, Gustavo A.
AU - Bar-Shalom, Rinat
AU - Furlan, Andrea
AU - Romeo, Roberto
AU - Gavagnin, Michelle
AU - Calabrese, Gianluca
AU - Garber, Arkadiy I.
AU - Steindler, Laura
N1 - Funding Information: Livio Steindler is warmly thanked for assisting us as captain and for providing his sailing boat Colpo de Fulmine II for the sponge sampling. We thank the “Area51 Diving School Trieste” for supporting all the dive equipment in this research and assisting with the scientific dives. Cláudia Ferreira is acknowledged for the design of Fig. 6. Dr. Stefan Green and Dr. Kevin J. Kunstman from the Sequencing Core at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) are acknowledged for advice on library preparation protocols and for sequencing. We thank Kelly Paglia and Christopher Brydges at the UC Davis metabolomic center for technical support with our sponge tissue analyses. Funding Information: This study was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, through Grant GBMF9352, and by the Israel Science Foundation [grant no. 1243/16] titled “Identification of molecular mechanisms underlying sponge-microbiome symbiosis.” GAR was supported by a Zuckerman Postdoctoral research fellowship. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/3/10
Y1 - 2023/3/10
N2 - BACKGROUND: Methanotrophy by the sponge-hosted microbiome has been mainly reported in the ecological context of deep-sea hydrocarbon seep niches where methane is either produced geothermically or via anaerobic methanogenic archaea inhabiting the sulfate-depleted sediments. However, methane-oxidizing bacteria from the candidate phylum Binatota have recently been described and shown to be present in oxic shallow-water marine sponges, where sources of methane remain undescribed.RESULTS: Here, using an integrative -omics approach, we provide evidence for sponge-hosted bacterial methane synthesis occurring in fully oxygenated shallow-water habitats. Specifically, we suggest methane generation occurs via at least two independent pathways involving methylamine and methylphosphonate transformations that, concomitantly to aerobic methane production, generate bioavailable nitrogen and phosphate, respectively. Methylphosphonate may be sourced from seawater continuously filtered by the sponge host. Methylamines may also be externally sourced or, alternatively, generated by a multi-step metabolic process where carnitine, derived from sponge cell debris, is transformed to methylamine by different sponge-hosted microbial lineages. Finally, methanotrophs specialized in pigment production, affiliated to the phylum Binatota, may provide a photoprotective function, closing a previously undescribed C 1-metabolic loop that involves both the sponge host and specific members of the associated microbial community. CONCLUSION: Given the global distribution of this ancient animal lineage and their remarkable water filtration activity, sponge-hosted methane cycling may affect methane supersaturation in oxic coastal environments. Depending on the net balance between methane production and consumption, sponges may serve as marine sources or sinks of this potent greenhouse gas. Video Abstract.
AB - BACKGROUND: Methanotrophy by the sponge-hosted microbiome has been mainly reported in the ecological context of deep-sea hydrocarbon seep niches where methane is either produced geothermically or via anaerobic methanogenic archaea inhabiting the sulfate-depleted sediments. However, methane-oxidizing bacteria from the candidate phylum Binatota have recently been described and shown to be present in oxic shallow-water marine sponges, where sources of methane remain undescribed.RESULTS: Here, using an integrative -omics approach, we provide evidence for sponge-hosted bacterial methane synthesis occurring in fully oxygenated shallow-water habitats. Specifically, we suggest methane generation occurs via at least two independent pathways involving methylamine and methylphosphonate transformations that, concomitantly to aerobic methane production, generate bioavailable nitrogen and phosphate, respectively. Methylphosphonate may be sourced from seawater continuously filtered by the sponge host. Methylamines may also be externally sourced or, alternatively, generated by a multi-step metabolic process where carnitine, derived from sponge cell debris, is transformed to methylamine by different sponge-hosted microbial lineages. Finally, methanotrophs specialized in pigment production, affiliated to the phylum Binatota, may provide a photoprotective function, closing a previously undescribed C 1-metabolic loop that involves both the sponge host and specific members of the associated microbial community. CONCLUSION: Given the global distribution of this ancient animal lineage and their remarkable water filtration activity, sponge-hosted methane cycling may affect methane supersaturation in oxic coastal environments. Depending on the net balance between methane production and consumption, sponges may serve as marine sources or sinks of this potent greenhouse gas. Video Abstract.
KW - Animals
KW - Archaea/genetics
KW - Bacteria/metabolism
KW - Geologic Sediments/microbiology
KW - Methane/metabolism
KW - Microbiota
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Porifera/microbiology
KW - RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/metabolism
KW - Water
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149970092&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-023-01467-4
DO - https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-023-01467-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 36899421
SN - 2049-2618
VL - 11
JO - Microbiome
JF - Microbiome
IS - 1
M1 - 49
ER -