- Anaerobic oxidation of methane
Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is a microbial process occurring mainly in anoxic marine
sediments . During AOMmethane is oxidized withsulfate as the terminalelectron acceptor : CH4 + SO42- → HCO3- + HS- + H2OAccording to current knowledge, AOM is mediated by a syntrophic consortium [http://www.thefreedictionary.com/syntrophy] of methanotrophic
archaea andsulfate-reducing bacteria . They often form small aggregates or sometimes voluminous mats. The archaeal partner is abbreviated ANME, which stands for "anaerobicmethanotroph ". ANME's are very closely related to methanogenic archaea and recent investigations suggest that AOM is an enzymatic reversal ofmethanogenesis . It is still poorly understood how the syntrophic partners interact and which intermediates are exchanged between the archaeal and bacterial cell. The research on AOM is hindered by the fact that the responsible organisms have not been isolated. This is due to the fact that these organisms show very slow growth rates with a minumum doubling time of a few months.Countless isolation efforts have not been able to isolate one of the anaerobic methanotrophs, a possible explanation can be that the ANME archaea and the SRB have an obligate syntrophic interaction and can therefor not be isolated individually.In
benthic marine areas with strong methane releases from fossil reservoirs (e.g. atcold seeps ,mud volcano es orgas hydrate deposits) AOM can be so high thatchemosynthetic organisms like filamentous sulfur bacteria (seeBeggiatoa ) or animals (clams, tube worms) withsymbiont sulfide-oxidizing bacteria can thrive on the large amounts ofhydrogen sulfide that are produced during AOM. The production ofbicarbonate from AOM can result in the precipitation ofcalcium carbonate or so-calledauthigenic carbonates.AOM is considered to be a very important process reducing the emission of the
greenhouse gas methane from the ocean into the atmosphere. It is estimated that almost 90% of all the methane that arises from marine sediments is oxidised anaerobically by this process.Recent investigations have shown that some consortia of archaea and bacteria are also able to oxidize methane with
nitrate instead of sulfate. [cite journal
journal=Nature
date=2006-04-13
volume=440
issue=7086
pages=878-879
title=A microbial consortium couples anaerobic methane oxidation to denitrification.
author=Raghoebarsing AA, Pol A, van de Pas-Schoonen KT, Smolders AJ, Ettwig KF, Rijpstra WI, Schouten S, Damsté JS, Op den Camp HJ, Jetten MS, Strous M
pmid=
url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v440/n7086/abs/nature04617.html] [cite press release
url=http://mr.caltech.edu/media/Press_Releases/PR13141.html
publisher=CalTech
title=Partnerships of Deep-Sea Methane Scavengers Revealed ] But recent findings suggest that this nitrate reducing process coupled to methane oxidation can also be performed by a single bacteria without the need for an archaeal partner. The organisms involved in the nitrate reducing process are not directly related to the ANME organims found in marine sediments where methane oxidation is coupled to sulfate reduction.In the literature two different abbreviations of anaerobic oxidation of methane can be found: AOM (anaerobic oxidation of methane) and AMO (anaerobic methane oxidation). AMO was considered to be grammatically incorrect, because it implies that anaerobic methane is oxidized.
References
External links
* [http://www.amethox.com Anaerobic Methane Oxidation]
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