Publication | Open Access
Isolation of Succinivibrionaceae Implicated in Low Methane Emissions from Tammar Wallabies
235
Citations
38
References
2011
Year
BiologyLow Methane EmissionsTammar WallabiesMicrobial SystematicsEngineeringTammar WallabyMicrobial DiversityMedicineMicrobial PhysiologyMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyEcological ChemistryMicrobiologyPartial ReconstructionMicrobiomeSymbiosisSuccinivibrionaceae ImplicatedWallaby Microbiota
The Tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) harbors unique gut bacteria and produces only one-fifth the amount of methane produced by ruminants per unit of digestible energy intake. We have isolated a dominant bacterial species (WG-1) from the wallaby microbiota affiliated with the family Succinivibrionaceae and implicated in lower methane emissions from starch-containing diets. This was achieved by using a partial reconstruction of the bacterium's metabolism from binned metagenomic data (nitrogen and carbohydrate utilization pathways and antibiotic resistance) to devise cultivation-based strategies that produced axenic WG-1 cultures. Pure-culture studies confirm that the bacterium is capnophilic and produces succinate, further explaining a microbiological basis for lower methane emissions from macropodids. This knowledge also provides new strategic targets for redirecting fermentation and reducing methane production in livestock.
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