Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Acidimicrobiia are widely distributed in nature and suggested to be autotrophic via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle. However, direct evidence of chemolithoautotrophy in Acidimicrobiia is lacking. Here, we report a chemolithoautotrophic enrichment from a saline lake, and the subsequent isolation and characterization of a chemolithoautotroph, Salinilacustristhrix flava EGI L10123T, which belongs to a new Acidimicrobiia family. Although strain EGI L10123T is autotrophic, neither its genome nor Acidimicrobiia metagenome-assembled genomes from the enrichment culture encode genes necessary for the CBB cycle. Instead, genomic, transcriptomic, enzymatic, and stable-isotope probing data hinted at the activity of the reversed oxidative TCA (roTCA) coupled with the oxidation of sulfide as the electron donor. Phylogenetic analysis and ancestral character reconstructions of Acidimicrobiia suggested that the essential CBB gene rbcL was acquired through multiple horizontal gene transfer events from diverse microbial taxa. In contrast, genes responsible for sulfide- or hydrogen-dependent roTCA carbon fixation were already present in the last common ancestor of extant Acidimicrobiia. These findings imply the possibility of roTCA carbon fixation in Acidimicrobiia and the ecological importance of Acidimicrobiia. Further research in the future is necessary to confirm whether these characteristics are truly widespread across the clade.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11697166PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ismejo/wrae147DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rotca carbon
12
carbon fixation
12
acidimicrobiia
9
reversed oxidative
8
oxidative tca
8
tca rotca
8
fixation acidimicrobiia
8
saline lake
8
cbb cycle
8
egi l10123t
8

Similar Publications

A novel thermophilic (optimum growth temperature ~ 60 °C) anaerobic Gram-negative bacterium, designated strain V6Fe1T, was isolated from sediments heated by the hydrothermal circulation of the Aeolian Islands (Vulcano, Italy) on the seafloor. Strain V6Fe1T belongs to the recently described family Deferrivibrionaceae in the phylum Deferribacterota. It grows chemoorganotrophically by fermentation of proteinaceous substrates and organic acids or by respiration of organic compounds using fumarate, nitrate, Fe(III), S°, and Mn(IV) as electron acceptors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reversed oxidative TCA (roTCA) for carbon fixation by an Acidimicrobiia strain from a saline lake.

ISME J

January 2024

Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi, 830011, PR China.

Acidimicrobiia are widely distributed in nature and suggested to be autotrophic via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle. However, direct evidence of chemolithoautotrophy in Acidimicrobiia is lacking. Here, we report a chemolithoautotrophic enrichment from a saline lake, and the subsequent isolation and characterization of a chemolithoautotroph, Salinilacustristhrix flava EGI L10123T, which belongs to a new Acidimicrobiia family.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Different pathways for autotrophic CO fixation can be recognized by the presence of genes for their specific key enzymes. On this basis, (meta)genomic, (meta)transcriptomic, or (meta)proteomic analysis enables the identification of the role of an organism or a distinct pathway in primary production. However, the recently discovered variant of the reductive tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle, the reverse oxidative tricarboxylic acid (roTCA) cycle, lacks unique enzymes, a feature that makes it cryptic for bioinformatics analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Geobacter sulfurreducens, previously thought to not be able to fix carbon dioxide, shows potential for chemolithoautotrophic growth through a newly discovered process called the reversed oxidative tricarboxylic acid cycle (roTCA).
  • After serial transfers with iron(III) as the electron acceptor and formate as the donor, an evolved strain (T17-3) demonstrated significant growth and an impressive Fe(III) reduction rate.
  • Mutations in T17-3 activated succinyl-CoA synthetase, necessary for the roTCA cycle, suggesting that this strain can utilize carbon dioxide, which could have implications for biotechnology and ecological understanding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Information on the biochemical pathways of carbon and energy metabolism in representatives of the deep lineage bacterial phylum are scarce. Here, we report the results of the sequencing and analysis of the high-quality draft genome of the thermophilic chemolithoautotrophic anaerobe . Genomic data suggest that CO assimilation is carried out by recently proposed reversible tricarboxylic acid cycle ("roTCA cycle").

View Article and Find Full Text PDF