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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Fermentation of Cellulose to Methane and Carbon Dioxide by a Rumen Anaerobic Fungus in a Triculture with Methanobrevibacter sp. Strain RA1 and Methanosarcina barkeri.

TLDR
The effect of methanogens is interpreted as a shift in the flow of electrons away from the formation of electron sink products lactate and ethanol to methane via hydrogen, favoring an increase in acetate, which is in turn converted to methane and carbon dioxide by M. barkeri.
Abstract
The fermentation of cellulose by a rumen anaerobic fungus in the presence of Methanobrevibacter sp. strain RA1 and Methanosarcina barkeri strain 227 resulted in the formation of 2 mol each of methane and carbon dioxide per mol of hexose fermented. Coculture of the fungus with either Methanobrevibacter sp. or M. barkeri produced 0.6 and 1.3 mol of methane per mol of hexose, respectively. Acetate, formate, ethanol, hydrogen, and lactate, which are major end products of cellulose fermentation by the fungus alone, were either absent or present in very low quantities at the end of the triculture fermentation (</=0.08 mol per mol of hexose fermented). During the time course of cellulose fermentation by the triculture, hydrogen was not detected (<1 x 10 atm; <0.001 kPa) and only acetate exhibited transitory accumulation; the maximum was equivalent to 1.4 mol per mol of hexose at 6 days which was higher than the total acetate yield of 0.73 in the fungus monoculture. The effect of methanogens is interpreted as a shift in the flow of electrons away from the formation of electron sink products lactate and ethanol to methane via hydrogen, favoring an increase in acetate, which is in turn converted to methane and carbon dioxide by M. barkeri. The maximum rate of cellulose degradation in the triculture (3 mg/ml per day) was faster than previously reported for bacterial cocultures and within 16 days degradation was complete. The triculture was used successfully also in the production of methane from cellulose in the plant fibrous materials, sisal (fiber from leaves of Agave sisalona L.) and barley straw leaf.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cellulose Degradation in Anaerobic Environments

TL;DR: This review discusses interactions among members of cellulose-decomposing microbial communities in various environments, and considers cellulose decomposing communities in soils, sediments, and aquatic environments, as well as those that degrade cellulose in association with animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methanogens: methane producers of the rumen and mitigation strategies.

TL;DR: The methanogens identified in the rumens of cattle and sheep, as well as a number of methane mitigation strategies that have been effective in vivo are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent developments in hydrogen management during anaerobic biological wastewater treatment.

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the microbial kinetics, energetics, and substrate specificities of anaerobic waste-water treatment systems is presented with descriptions of three different state-of-the-art reactor configurations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth of anaerobic rumen fungi on defined and semi-defined media lacking rumen fluid

TL;DR: Anaerobic fungi were isolated from rumen digesta of sheep and cattle and were purified using a plate culture technique and successfully cultured on a semi-defined medium which lacked rumen fluid, and on a defined medium.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Semimicro determination of cellulose in biological materials.

TL;DR: The semimicro method gives quantitative recovery of purified cellulose from microbiological culture media, and also appears to be satisfactory for cellulOSE from paper pulp.

The Roll-Tube Method for Cultivation of Strict Anaerobes

Robert E. Hungate, +1 more
TL;DR: The anaerobes can be classified as oxyduric, i.e. surviving exposure to O2 but not growing in its presence, and oxylabile Species, killed by exposure to oxygen as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on the rumen flagellate Neocallimastix frontalis.

TL;DR: The vast increase in the population density of the rumen flageLLate Neocallimastix frontalis shortly after the host animal has commenced eating is caused by stimulation of a reproductive body on a vegetative phase of the organism to differentiate and liberate the flagellates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellulose fermentation by a rumen anaerobic fungus in both the absence and the presence of rumen methanogens

TL;DR: The demonstration of cellulose fermentation by a fungus extends the range of known rumen organisms capable of participating in cellulose digestion and provides further support for a role of anaerobic fungi in rumen fiber digestion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rumen anaerobic fungi of cattle and sheep.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that plant fragments in the rumen are the sites of colonization and development by the anaerobic phycomycetous fungi, and suggested that these fungi may form a significant part of theRumen microbiota in cattle and sheep fed on fibrous diets and suggest that they may be important in fiber digestion.
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