Background. Ruminants are important contributors to global methane emissions via the action of microbes in their reticulo-rumens. Animal breeding is being investigated as a means of lowering methane emissions and sheep with naturally high or low methane yield phenotypes have been identified. The animal methane yield phenotype is heritable, and the microbiomes of high and low methane yield sheep differ in regard to microbial composition and methanogen gene expression.
Results. Detailed analysis of the rumen microbiomes of high methane yield sheep shows that gene and transcript abundances of bacterial type III secretion system genes are positively correlated with methane yield in sheep. Most of the bacterial type III secretion system genes could not be assigned to a particular bacterial group, but several genes were affiliated with the genus Succinivibrio, and searches of bacterial genome sequences found that strains of S. dextrinosolvens were part of a small group of rumen bacteria that encode this type of secretion system. In co-culture experiments, a S. dextrinosolvens strain showed a growth-enhancing effect on a methanogen belonging to the order Methanomassiliicoccales, and inhibition of a representative of the Methanobrevibacter gottschalkii clade.
Conclusions. This is the first report of bacterial type III secretion system genes being associated with high methane emissions in ruminants, and identifies these secretions systems as potential new targets for methane mitigation research. The effects of S. dextrinosolvens on the growth of rumen methanogens in co-cultures indicate that bacteria-methanogen interactions are important modulators of methane production in ruminant animals.
Kamke, J., Soni, P., Li, Y., Ganesh, S., Kelly, W. J., Leahy, S. C., … Attwood, G. T. (2017). Gene and transcript abundances of bacterial type III secretion systems from the rumen microbiome are correlated with methane yield in sheep. BMC Research Notes, 10, 367. doi:10.1186/s13104-017-2671-0