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    Aerobic bacterial methane synthesis in the human gastrointestinal tract
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 2023) Jackson, Thomas Robert; Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Seth Walk
    Aerobic bacterial methane synthesis constitutes a paradigm-shifting novel metabolism recently described in aquatic environments. It challenges the traditional model of methanogenesis as being a strictly anaerobic process carried out by archaeal methanogens. To date, the presence of aerobic bacterial methane synthesis has not been studied within the context of the human gastrointestinal tract. The goal of this work was to investigate the possibility of the presence of such metabolisms in the human gut microbiome. To investigate this, fecal samples from six individuals were first screened for the ability to produce methane under aerobic conditions. Bacteria from two of those fecal samples were isolated and evaluated for their ability to utilize methylamine, a known substrate involved in aerobic bacterial methane synthesis, as a sole nitrogen source. The ability of those isolates to produce methane under aerobic conditions from methylamine was then evaluated. Additionally, a flask-independent culture-based assay was developed in order to screen larger numbers of future isolates for the ability to utilize methylamine as a sole nitrogen source. This work demonstrates the first evidence of aerobic bacterial methane synthesis from members of the human gastrointestinal tract, finding two isolates capable of producing methane under aerobic conditions. Such findings broaden the understanding of methane-generating pathways that may have implications for the development of dysbiosis and atherosclerosis in human hosts.
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