Anaerobic Degradation of Normal- and Branched-Chain Fatty Acids with Four or More Carbons to Methane by a Syntrophic Methanogenic Triculture

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RESUMO

Syntrophic degradation of normal- and branched-chain fatty acids with 4 to 9 carbons was investigated with a mesophilic syntrophic isobutyrate-butyrate-degrading triculture consisting of the non-spore-forming, syntrophic, fatty acid-degrading, gram-positive rod-shaped strain IB, Methanobacterium formicicum T1N, and Methanosarcina mazei T18. This triculture converted butyrate and isobutyrate to methane and converted valerate and 2-methylbutyrate to propionate and methane. This triculture also degraded caproate, 4-methylvalerate, heptanoate, 2-methylhexanoate, caprylate, and pelargoate. During the syntrophic conversion of isobutyrate and butyrate, a reversible isomerization between butyrate and isobutyrate occurred; isobutyrate and butyrate were isomerized to the other isomeric form to reach nearly equal concentrations and then their concentrations decreased at the same rates. Butyrate was an intermediate of syntrophic isobutyrate degradation. When butyrate was degraded in the presence of propionate, 2-methylbutyrate was synthesized from propionate and isobutyrate formed from butyrate. During the syntrophic degradation of valerate, isobutyrate, butyrate, and 2-methylbutyrate were formed and then degraded. During syntrophic degradation of 2-methylbutyrate, isobutyrate and butyrate were formed and then degraded.

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