• Login
    • Login
    Advanced Search
    View Item 
    •   Maseno IR Home
    • Journal Articles
    • School of Public health & Community Development
    • Department of Biomedical Sciences
    • View Item
    •   Maseno IR Home
    • Journal Articles
    • School of Public health & Community Development
    • Department of Biomedical Sciences
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    “Methanoplasmatales,” Thermoplasmatales-related archaea in termite guts and other environments, are the seventh order of methanogens

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    8245.full-converted.docx (1.933Mb)
    Publication Date
    2012-12-01
    Author
    Kristina Paul, James O Nonoh, Lena Mikulski, Andreas Brune
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract/Overview
    The Euryarchaeota comprise both methanogenic and nonmethanogenic orders and many lineages of uncultivated archaea with unknown properties. One of these deep-branching lineages, distantly related to the Thermoplasmatales, has been discovered in various environments, including marine habitats, soil, and also the intestinal tracts of termites and mammals. By comparative phylogenetic analysis, we connected this lineage of 16S rRNA genes to a large clade of unknown mcrA gene sequences, a func- tional marker for methanogenesis, obtained from the same habitats. The identical topologies of 16S rRNA and mcrA gene trees and the perfect congruence of all branches, including several novel groups that we obtained from the guts of termites and cock- roaches, strongly suggested that they stem from the same microorganisms. This was further corroborated by two highly enriched cultures of closely related methanogens from the guts of a higher termite (Cubitermes ugandensis) and a millipede (Anadenobo- lus sp.), which represented one of the arthropod-specific clusters in the respective trees. Numerous other pairs of habitat-specific sequence clusters were obtained from the guts of other termites and cockroaches but were also found in previously published data sets from the intestinal tracts of mammals (e.g., rumen cluster C) and other environments. Together with the recently de- scribed Methanomassiliicoccus luminyensis isolated from human feces, which falls into rice cluster III, the results of our study strongly support the idea that the entire clade of “uncultured Thermoplasmatales” in fact represents the seventh order of metha- nogenic archaea, for which the provisional name “Methanoplasmatales” is proposed.
    Permalink
    https://repository.maseno.ac.ke/handle/123456789/1654
    Collections
    • Department of Biomedical Sciences [95]

    Maseno University. All rights reserved | Copyright © 2022 
    Contact Us | Send Feedback

     

     

    Browse

    All of Maseno IRCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Statistics

    View Usage Statistics

    Maseno University. All rights reserved | Copyright © 2022 
    Contact Us | Send Feedback