Genome-centric metagenomics reveals electroactive syntrophs in a conductive particle-dependent consortium from coastal sediments


Publication

Citation
Jovicic et al. (2026). Nature Communications 17 (1)
Names (2)
Abstract
Abstract Conductive particles are common in coastal sediments, yet their role in shaping methane-producing communities and pathways remains unclear. We applied genome-resolved metagenomics to a sediment-derived consortium serially transferred for a decade and obligately dependent on granular activated carbon (GAC). We discovered a particle-obligate food web composed of electrogenic syntrophic acetate oxidizers (SAO), an electrotrophic methanogen, and necromass recyclers. The primary SAO electrogen, Candidatus Geosyntrophus acetoxidans, represents a new genus and possesses a complete acetate oxidation pathway and extracellular electron-transfer (EET) machinery, including two porin-cytochrome conduits, 43 additional multiheme cytochromes and conductive pili. A secondary SAO, a Lentimicrobium sp. with a giant PCC-cluster, supplies an alternative EET-linked acetate-oxidation route. Electrons from electrogens transfer via GAC to a Methanosarcina equipped with the heptaheme cytochrome MmcA and flagellin for electron uptake. These results provide a genomic blueprint of this particle-obligate environmental consortium and suggest an overlooked acetate-to-methane electron-transfer route in geoconductor-rich anoxic sediments.
Authors
Jovicic, Danijel; Anestis, Konstantinos; Fiutowski, Jacek; Jørgensen, Bo Barker; Kjeldsen, Kasper Urup; Rotaru, Amelia-Elena
Publication date
2026-03-24
DOI
10.1038/s41467-026-70468-2 

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