Journal Articles

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    Structural characterisation of nucleotide sugar short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases from the thermophilic pseudomurein-containing methanogen Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus ΔH
    (John Wiley and Sons Ltd on behalf of Federation of European Biochemical Societies, 2025-09-03) Carbone V; Schofield LR; Edwards PJB; Sutherland-Smith AJ; Ronimus RS
    Epimerases and dehydratases are widely studied members of the extendedshort-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) enzyme superfamily and areimportant in nucleotide sugar conversion and diversification, for example,the interconversion of uridine diphosphate (UDP)-linked glucose andgalactose. Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus contains a cluster ofgenes, the annotations of which indicate involvement in glycan biosynthesissuch as that of cell walls or capsular polysaccharides. In particular, genesencoding UDP-glucose 4-epimerase related protein (Mth375), UDP-glucose4-epimerase homologue (Mth380) and dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydrataserelated protein (Mth373) may be involved in the biosynthesis of an unusualaminosugar in pseudomurein. In this paper, we present the structures ofMth375, an archaeal sugar epimerase/dehydratase protein (WbmF) deter-mined to a resolution of 2.0 A. The structure contains an N-terminalRossmann-fold domain with bound nicotinamide adenine dinucleotidehydride (NADH) and a C-terminal catalytic domain with bound UDP. Wealso present the structure for Mth373 co-crystallised with uridine-50-diphosphate-xylopyranose to a resolution of 1.96 A as a NAD+-dependentoxidative decarboxylase (UDP-xylose synthase; EC4.1.1.35). Molecularmodelling has also allowed for the identification of Mth380 as aUDP-N-acetylglucosamine 4-epimerase (WbpP; EC5.1.3.7), Mth631 as aUDP-glucose 4-epimerase (GalE; EC5.1.3.2) and Mth1789 as a classicaldTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydratase (EC4.2.1.46). The UDP–sugar specificityof each archaeal nucleotide sugar short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase.
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    Isolation and characterization of Methanosphaera sp. ISO3-F5, a member of a novel and widespread species of rumen methanogens growing with methanol plus hydrogen
    (The Microbes, 2024-12-03) Jeyanathan J; Palevich N; Reilly K; Palevich FP; Maclean PH; Li D; Altermann E; Kim CC; van Scheepstal IM; Hoskin SO; Kelly WJ; Leahy SC; Attwood GT; Ronimus RS; Henderson G; Janssen PH
    Rumen methanogens predominantly fall into two physiological groups: hydrogenotrophs which use hydrogen (H2) to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) to methane (CH4), and methylotrophs which use H2 to reduce methanol and methylamines as substrates for methanogenesis. We used a dilution to extinction approach to isolate two hydrogenotrophic Methanocatella spp. and four cultures of methylotrophic methanogens from sheep rumen contents. Three of the methylotrophs were stable mixed cultures containing methanogens belonging to different lineages of the order Methanomassiliicoccales and one was a pure Methanosphaera culture. Methanosphaera sp. ISO3-F5 has a comparatively large genome (2.68 Mb) comprised of two replicons, a chromosome and a megaplasmid. The genome has an average G + C content of 30.5 % and encodes 2360 putative protein-coding genes. Cells of ISO3-F5 have a spherical shape, 0.6–1.2 µm in diameter, usually occurring in pairs or loose clumps, and have no flagellum. Cells stain Gram positive, have a single thick cell wall and divide by the formation of a cross wall. The optimum temperature for growth was 39°C to 42°C and the optimum pH was 6.7–6.8. Acetate was required for growth, but CH4 was not produced from acetate, formate, ethanol, methylamine, or isopropanol with or without H2/CO2. Volatile fatty acids and rumen fluid were also found to enhance the growth of ISO3-F5, while coenzyme M did not. ISO3-F5 produced CH4 from methanol in the presence of H2 and the genes encoding the necessary methanogenesis pathway have been identified. Based on morphological, physiological, and genomic characteristics, ISO3-F5 is a new species of the genus Methanosphaera. Our study shows that simple isolation methods allowed us to culture diverse and significant members of the rumen methanogen community.
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    Tailored Nanoparticles With the Potential to Reduce Ruminant Methane Emissions.
    (Frontiers Media S.A., 2022-03-11) Altermann E; Reilly K; Young W; Ronimus RS; Muetzel S; Tsapekos P
    Agricultural methane produced by archaea in the forestomach of ruminants is a key contributor to rising levels of greenhouse gases leading to climate change. Functionalized biological polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) nanoparticles offer a new concept for the reduction of enteric methane emissions by inhibiting rumen methanogens. Nanoparticles were functionalized in vivo with an archaeal virus lytic enzyme, PeiR, active against a range of rumen Methanobrevibacter species. The impact of functionalized nanoparticles against rumen methanogens was demonstrated in pure cultures, in rumen batch and continuous flow rumen models yielding methane reduction of up to 15% over 11 days in the most complex system. We further present evidence of biological nanoparticle fermentation in a rumen environment. Elevated levels of short-chain fatty acids essential to ruminant nutrition were recorded, giving rise to a promising new strategy combining methane mitigation with a possible increase in animal productivity.
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    Inhibition of Rumen Methanogens by a Novel Archaeal Lytic Enzyme Displayed on Tailored Bionanoparticles.
    (Frontiers Media S.A., 2018-10-09) Altermann E; Schofield LR; Ronimus RS; Beattie AK; Reilly K; Neubauer P
    Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, 25 times more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide. Ruminant methane emissions contribute almost 30% to anthropogenic sources of global atmospheric methane levels and a reduction in methane emissions would significantly contribute to slowing global temperature rises. Here we demonstrate the use of a lytic enyzme, PeiR, from a methanogen virus that infects Methanobrevibacter ruminantium M1 as an effective agent inhibiting a range of rumen methanogen strains in pure culture. We determined the substrate specificity of soluble PeiR and demonstrated that the enzyme is capable of hydrolysing the pseudomurein cell walls of methanogens. Subsequently, peiR was fused to the polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) synthase gene phaC and displayed on the surface of PHA bionanoparticles (BNPs) expressed in Eschericia coli via one-step biosynthesis. These tailored BNPs were capable of lysing not only the original methanogen host strain, but a wide range of other rumen methanogen strains in vitro. Methane production was reduced by up to 97% for 5 days post-inoculation in the in vitro assay. We propose that tailored BNPs carrying anti-methanogen enzymes represent a new class of methane inhibitors. Tailored BNPs can be rapidly developed and may be able to modulate the methanogen community in vivo with the aim to lower ruminant methane emissions without impacting animal productivity.
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    Complete genome sequence of Methanosphaera sp. ISO3-F5, a rumen methylotrophic methanogen.
    (American Society for Microbiology, 2024-04-11) Palevich N; Jeyanathan J; Reilly K; Palevich FP; Maclean PH; Li D; Altermann E; Kelly WJ; Leahy SC; Attwood GT; Ronimus RS; Henderson G; Janssen PH; Stedman KM
    Methanosphaera spp. are methylotrophic methanogenic archaea and members of the order Methanobacteriales with few cultured representatives. Methanosphaera sp. ISO3-F5 was isolated from sheep rumen contents in New Zealand. Here, we report its complete genome, consisting of a large chromosome and a megaplasmid (GenBank accession numbers CP118753 and CP118754, respectively).
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    The Structural and Functional Characterization of Mammalian ADP-dependent Glucokinase.
    (19/02/2016) Richter JP; Goroncy AK; Ronimus RS; Sutherland-Smith AJ
    The enzyme-catalyzed phosphorylation of glucose to glucose-6-phosphate is a reaction central to the metabolism of all life. ADP-dependent glucokinase (ADPGK) catalyzes glucose-6-phosphate production, utilizing ADP as a phosphoryl donor in contrast to the more well characterized ATP-requiring hexokinases. ADPGK is found in Archaea and metazoa; in Archaea, ADPGK participates in a glycolytic role, but a function in most eukaryotic cell types remains unknown. We have determined structures of the eukaryotic ADPGK revealing a ribokinase-like tertiary fold similar to archaeal orthologues but with significant differences in some secondary structural elements. Both the unliganded and the AMP-bound ADPGK structures are in the "open" conformation. The structures reveal the presence of a disulfide bond between conserved cysteines that is positioned at the nucleotide-binding loop of eukaryotic ADPGK. The AMP-bound ADPGK structure defines the nucleotide-binding site with one of the disulfide bond cysteines coordinating the AMP with its main chain atoms, a nucleotide-binding motif that appears unique to eukaryotic ADPGKs. Key amino acids at the active site are structurally conserved between mammalian and archaeal ADPGK, and site-directed mutagenesis has confirmed residues essential for enzymatic activity. ADPGK is substrate inhibited by high glucose concentration and shows high specificity for glucose, with no activity for other sugars, as determined by NMR spectroscopy, including 2-deoxyglucose, the glucose analogue used for tumor detection by positron emission tomography.
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    Structural characterisation of methanogen pseudomurein cell wall peptide ligases homologous to bacterial MurE/F murein peptide ligases.
    (2022-09) Subedi BP; Schofield LR; Carbone V; Wolf M; Martin WF; Ronimus RS; Sutherland-Smith AJ
    Archaea have diverse cell wall types, yet none are identical to bacterial peptidoglycan (murein). Methanogens Methanobacteria and Methanopyrus possess cell walls of pseudomurein, a structural analogue of murein. Pseudomurein differs from murein in containing the unique archaeal sugar N-acetyltalosaminuronic acid instead of N-acetylmuramic acid, β-1,3 glycosidic bonds in place of β-1,4 bonds and only l-amino acids in the peptide cross-links. We have determined crystal structures of methanogen pseudomurein peptide ligases (termed pMurE) from Methanothermus fervidus (Mfer762) and Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus (Mth734) that are structurally most closely related to bacterial MurE peptide ligases. The homology of the archaeal pMurE and bacterial MurE enzymes is clear both in the overall structure and at the level of each of the three domains. In addition, we identified two UDP-binding sites in Mfer762 pMurE, one at the exterior surface of the interface of the N-terminal and middle domains, and a second site at an inner surface continuous with the highly conserved interface of the three domains. Residues involved in ATP binding in MurE are conserved in pMurE, suggesting that a similar ATP-binding pocket is present at the interface of the middle and the C-terminal domains of pMurE. The presence of pMurE ligases in members of the Methanobacteriales and Methanopyrales, that are structurally related to bacterial MurE ligases, supports the idea that the biosynthetic origins of archaeal pseudomurein and bacterial peptidoglycan cell walls are evolutionarily related.