scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Phylogenomic Data Support a Seventh Order of Methylotrophic Methanogens and Provide Insights into the Evolution of Methanogenesis

TLDR
Phylogenetic analysis including homologs retrieved from environmental samples indicates that methylotrophic methanogenesis (regardless of dependency on H2) is not restricted to gut representatives but may be an ancestral characteristic of the whole order, and possibly also of ancient origin in the Euryarchaeota.
Abstract
Increasing evidence from sequence data from various environments, including the human gut, suggests the existence of a previously unknown putative seventh order of methanogens. The first genomic data from members of this lineage, Methanomassiliicoccus luminyensis and “Candidatus Methanomethylophilus alvus,” provide insights into its evolutionary history and metabolic features. Phylogenetic analysis of ribosomal proteins robustly indicates a monophyletic group independent of any previously known methanogenic order, which shares ancestry with the Marine Benthic Group D, the Marine Group II, the DHVE2 group, and the Thermoplasmatales. This phylogenetic position, along with the analysis of enzymes involved in core methanogenesis, strengthens a single ancient origin of methanogenesis in the Euryarchaeota and indicates further multiple independent losses of this metabolism in nonmethanogenic lineages than previously suggested. Genomic analysis revealed an unprecedented loss of the genes coding for the first six steps of methanogenesis from H2/CO2 and the oxidative part of methylotrophic methanogenesis, consistent with the fact that M. luminyensis and “Ca. M. alvus” are obligate H2-dependent methylotrophic methanogens. Genomic data also suggest that these methanogens may use a large panel of methylated compounds. Phylogenetic analysis including homologs retrieved from environmental samples indicates that methylotrophic methanogenesis (regardless of dependency on H2) is not restricted to gut representatives but may be an ancestral characteristic of the whole order, and possibly also of ancient origin in the Euryarchaeota. 16S rRNA and McrA trees show that this new order of methanogens is very diverse and occupies environments highly relevant for methane production, therefore representing a key lineage to fully understand the diversity and evolution of methanogenesis.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Current and Past Strategies for Bacterial Culture in Clinical Microbiology

TL;DR: The development of axenic media for the culture of Treponema pallidum or Mycobacterium leprae remains an important challenge that the patience and innovations of cultivators will enable them to overcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evolving view of methane metabolism in the Archaea.

TL;DR: This Review examines the diversity, metabolism and evolutionary history of mcr-containing archaea in new euryarchaeotal lineages and novel archaeal phyla and highlights the evolutionary relationships of key enzymes with recently discovered alkane-oxidizing archaea.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Growing Tree of Archaea: New Perspectives on Their Diversity, Evolution and Ecology

TL;DR: The archaeal tree is being rapidly filled up with new branches constituting phyla, classes and orders, generating novel challenges for high-rank systematics, and providing key information for dissecting the origin of this domain, the evolutionary trajectories that have shaped its current diversity, and its relationships with Bacteria and Eukarya.
Journal ArticleDOI

Archaea and the human gut: New beginning of an old story

TL;DR: An updated census of the archaeal diversity associated with the human GIT and their possible role in the gut physiology and health is provided and particularly focuses on the still poorly characterized 7th order of methanogens, the Methanomassiliicoccales associated to aged population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic exploration of the diversity, ecology, and evolution of the archaeal domain of life

TL;DR: These findings support hypotheses that suggest that all extant archaea evolved from an anaerobic autotrophic ancestor that used the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and may have been able to obtain energy through methanogenesis.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput

TL;DR: MUSCLE is a new computer program for creating multiple alignments of protein sequences that includes fast distance estimation using kmer counting, progressive alignment using a new profile function the authors call the log-expectation score, and refinement using tree-dependent restricted partitioning.
Journal ArticleDOI

MrBayes 3: Bayesian phylogenetic inference under mixed models

TL;DR: MrBayes 3 performs Bayesian phylogenetic analysis combining information from different data partitions or subsets evolving under different stochastic evolutionary models to analyze heterogeneous data sets and explore a wide variety of structured models mixing partition-unique and shared parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

New Algorithms and Methods to Estimate Maximum-Likelihood Phylogenies: Assessing the Performance of PhyML 3.0

TL;DR: A new algorithm to search the tree space with user-defined intensity using subtree pruning and regrafting topological moves and a new test to assess the support of the data for internal branches of a phylogeny are introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Improved General Amino Acid Replacement Matrix

TL;DR: This method further refine this method by incorporating the variability of evolutionary rates across sites in the matrix estimation and using a much larger and diverse database than BRKALN, which was used to estimate WAG.
Related Papers (5)