Importance of methane-oxidizing bacteria in the methane budget as revealed by the use of a specific inhibitor

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Abstract

METHANE is a greenhouse gas whose concentration in the atmosphere is increasing1-3. Much of this methane is derived from the metabolism of methane-generating (methanogenic) bacteria4,5 and over the past two decades much has been learned about the ecology of methanogens; specific inhibitors of methanogenesis, such as 2-bromoethanesulphonic acid, have proved useful in this regard6. In contrast, although much is known about the biochemistry of methane-oxidizing (methanotrophic) bacteria7, ecological investigations have been hampered by the lack of an analogous specific inhibitor6. Methanotrophs limit the flux of methane to the atmosphere from sediments8,9 and consume atmospheric methane10, but the quantitative importance of methanotrophy in the global methane budget is not well known5. Methylfluoride (CH3F) is known to inhibit oxygen consumption by Methylococcus capsu-latus11, and to inhibit the oxidation of 14CH4 to 14CO2 by endosymbionts in mussel gill tissues12. Here we report that methylfluoride (MF) inhibits the oxidation of methane by methane monooxy-genase, and by using methylfluoride in field investigations, we find that methanotrophic bacteria can consume more than 90% of the methane potentially available. © 1992 Nature Publishing Group.

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Oremland, R. S., & Culbertson, C. W. (1992). Importance of methane-oxidizing bacteria in the methane budget as revealed by the use of a specific inhibitor. Nature, 356(6368), 421–423. https://doi.org/10.1038/356421a0

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