Publication | Open Access
Cohn’s <i>Crenothrix</i> is a filamentous methane oxidizer with an unusual methane monooxygenase
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Citations
25
References
2006
Year
Cohn ’Bioorganic ChemistryMolecular BiologyMicrobial PhysiologyOrganic ChemistryChemistryFerdinand CohnMicrobial EvolutionPhylogenetic AnalysisCrenothrix PolysporaAnaerobic CulturingBioenergeticsMicrobial EcologyFilamentous Methane OxidizerEnvironmental MicrobiologyComplex Life CycleEvolutionary MicrobiologyAerobic CulturingMicrobial DiversityProkaryotic SystemAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryCatalysisUnusual Methane MonooxygenaseBiologyMicrobial SystematicsNatural SciencesMicrobiologyMedicineCarbonyl Metabolism
135 years ago Ferdinand Cohn, the founder of bacteriology, microscopically observed a conspicuous filamentous bacterium with a complex life cycle and described it as Crenothrix polyspora. This uncultured bacterium is infamous for mass developments in drinking water systems, but its phylogeny and physiology remained unknown. We show that C. polyspora is a gammaproteobacterium closely related to methanotrophs and capable of oxidizing methane. We discovered that C. polyspora encodes a phylogenetically very unusual particulate methane monooxygenase whose expression is strongly increased in the presence of methane. Our findings demonstrate a previously unrecognized complexity of the evolutionary history and cell biology of methane-oxidizing bacteria.
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