Propionate Production from Carbon Monoxide by Synthetic Cocultures of Acetobacterium wieringae and Propionigenic Bacteria

Gas fermentation is a promising way to convert CO-rich gases to chemicals. We studied the use of synthetic cocultures composed of carboxydotrophic and propionigenic bacteria to convert CO to propionate. So far, isolated carboxydotrophs cannot directly ferment CO to propionate, and therefore, this co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2021-06, Vol.87 (14), p.e0283920-e0283920
Hauptverfasser: Moreira, João P C, Diender, Martijn, Arantes, Ana L, Boeren, Sjef, Stams, Alfons J M, Alves, M Madalena, Alves, Joana I, Sousa, Diana Z
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gas fermentation is a promising way to convert CO-rich gases to chemicals. We studied the use of synthetic cocultures composed of carboxydotrophic and propionigenic bacteria to convert CO to propionate. So far, isolated carboxydotrophs cannot directly ferment CO to propionate, and therefore, this cocultivation approach was investigated. Four distinct synthetic cocultures were constructed, consisting of Acetobacterium wieringae (DSM 1911 ) and Pelobacter propionicus (DSM 2379 ), (DSM 1911 ) and Anaerotignum neopropionicum (DSM 3847 ), strain JM and (DSM 2379 ), and strain JM and (DSM 3847 ). Propionate was produced by all the cocultures, with the highest titer (∼24 mM) being measured in the coculture composed of strain JM and , which also produced isovalerate (∼4 mM), butyrate (∼1 mM), and isobutyrate (0.3 mM). This coculture was further studied using proteogenomics. As expected, enzymes involved in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway in strain JM, which are responsible for the conversion of CO to ethanol and acetate, were detected; the proteome of confirmed the conversion of ethanol to propionate via the acrylate pathway. In addition, proteins related to amino acid metabolism and stress response were highly abundant during cocultivation, which raises the hypothesis that amino acids are exchanged by the two microorganisms, accompanied by isovalerate and isobutyrate production. This highlights the importance of explicitly looking at fortuitous microbial interactions during cocultivation to fully understand coculture behavior. Syngas fermentation has great potential for the sustainable production of chemicals from wastes (via prior gasification) and flue gases containing CO/CO . Research efforts need to be directed toward expanding the product portfolio of gas fermentation, which is currently limited to mainly acetate and ethanol. This study provides the basis for a microbial process to produce propionate from CO using synthetic cocultures composed of acetogenic and propionigenic bacteria and elucidates the metabolic pathways involved. Furthermore, based on proteomics results, we hypothesize that the two bacterial species engage in an interaction that results in amino acid exchange, which subsequently promotes isovalerate and isobutyrate production. These findings provide a new understanding of gas fermentation and a coculturing strategy for expanding the product spectrum of microbial conversion of CO/CO .
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/AEM.02839-20