TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of protein-degraders in an anaerobic digester by protein stable isotope probing and metagenomics
AU - Deng, Zhe
AU - Poulsen, Jan Struckmann
AU - Nielsen, Jeppe Lund
AU - Weissbrodt, David G.
AU - Spanjers, Henri
AU - van Lier, Jules B.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Presence of carbohydrates hampers protein degradation in anaerobic
digesters. To understand this phenomenon, we used proteogenomics to
identify the active protein-degraders in the presence of low and high
carbohydrates concentrations. Active metabolic pathways of the
identified protein-degraders were investigated using proteomics with 13C-protein substrates (protein stable isotope probing). Results showed that 1) Acinetobacter
was the active protein-degraders under both protein-fed and
protein-glucose mixture-fed conditions, 2) the relative abundance of Acinetobacter was not affected by the presence of carbohydrates, 3) the incorporation of the 13C-labelled
protein substrate was predominantly observed in outer membrane-bound
proteins and porin proteins, which are associated with proteinases or
the transportation of amino acids across the cell wall. The Acinetobacter
metabolic model and the incubation conditions suggested that glucose
and proteins were degraded through anaerobic respiration. The negative
impact of carbohydrates on protein biodegradation was attributed to Acinetobacter's
preference for carbohydrates. This work highlights that efficient
degradation of protein and carbohydrate mixtures in anaerobic digesters
requires a staged or time-phased approach and enrichment of active
protein-degraders, offering a new direction for process optimization in
anaerobic digestion systems.
AB - Presence of carbohydrates hampers protein degradation in anaerobic
digesters. To understand this phenomenon, we used proteogenomics to
identify the active protein-degraders in the presence of low and high
carbohydrates concentrations. Active metabolic pathways of the
identified protein-degraders were investigated using proteomics with 13C-protein substrates (protein stable isotope probing). Results showed that 1) Acinetobacter
was the active protein-degraders under both protein-fed and
protein-glucose mixture-fed conditions, 2) the relative abundance of Acinetobacter was not affected by the presence of carbohydrates, 3) the incorporation of the 13C-labelled
protein substrate was predominantly observed in outer membrane-bound
proteins and porin proteins, which are associated with proteinases or
the transportation of amino acids across the cell wall. The Acinetobacter
metabolic model and the incubation conditions suggested that glucose
and proteins were degraded through anaerobic respiration. The negative
impact of carbohydrates on protein biodegradation was attributed to Acinetobacter's
preference for carbohydrates. This work highlights that efficient
degradation of protein and carbohydrate mixtures in anaerobic digesters
requires a staged or time-phased approach and enrichment of active
protein-degraders, offering a new direction for process optimization in
anaerobic digestion systems.
KW - Anaerobic digestion
KW - Anaerobic respiration
KW - Metagenomics
KW - Protein stable isotope probing (protein-SIP)
KW - Protein-degraders
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003308541&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00253-025-13483-5
DO - 10.1007/s00253-025-13483-5
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0175-7598
VL - 109
JO - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
JF - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
IS - 1
M1 - 87
ER -