Akihisa Kita
Hiroshima University
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Bioresource Technology | 2014
Toyokazu Miura; Akihisa Kita; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Yutaka Nakashimada
Various marine sediments were evaluated as promising microbial sources for methane fermentation of Saccharina japonica, a brown alga, at seawater salinity. All marine sediments tested produced mainly acetate among volatile fatty acids. One marine sediment completely converted the produced volatile fatty acids to methane in a short period. Archaeal community analysis revealed that acetoclastic methanogens belonging to the Methanosarcina genus dominated after cultivation. Measurement of the specific conversion rate at each step of methane production under saline conditions demonstrated that the marine sediments had higher conversion rates of butyrate and acetate than mesophilic methanogenic granules. These results clearly show that marine sediments can be used as microbial sources for methane production from algae under high-salt conditions without dilution.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2013
Akihisa Kita; Yuki Iwasaki; Shinichi Yano; Yutaka Nakashimada; Tamotsu Hoshino; Katsuji Murakami
The application of microbial catalysts to syngas from the gasification of lignocellulosic biomass is gaining interest. Acetogens, a group of anaerobic bacteria, can grow autotrophically on gaseous substrates such as hydrogen and carbon dioxide or syngas and produce acetate via the acetyl-CoA pathway. Here, we report the isolation from a soil sample of two thermophilic acetogen strains, Y72 and Y73, that are closely related to Moorella sp. HUC22-1 and M. thermoacetica ATCC39073. The optimal growth temperature and pH for the strains were 60 °C and 6.0-6.5. Uracil auxotrophy was induced in them by replacing the orotate monophosphate decarboxylase gene (pyrF) with the kanamycin resistant marker (kan(r)). The transformants were isolated by supplementation of the basal medium with 300 mg/L of kanamycin. The transformation efficiency of strains Y72 and Y73 was 20-fold higher than that of strain ATCC39073. Hence these strains are considered possible hosts for thermophilic syngas fermentation.
Bioresource Technology | 2015
Toyokazu Miura; Akihisa Kita; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Yutaka Nakashimada
Here, a methanogenic microbial community was developed from marine sediments to have improved methane productivity from brown algae under high salinity. Fed-batch cultivation was conducted by adding dry seaweed at 1wt% total solid (TS) based on the liquid weight of the NaCl-containing sediment per round of cultivation. The methane production rate and level of salinity increased 8-fold and 1.6-fold, respectively, at the 10th round of cultivation. Moreover, the rate of methane production remained high, even at the 10th round of cultivation, with accumulation of salts derived from 10wt% TS of seaweed. The salinity of the 10th-round culture was equivalent to 5% NaCl. The improved methane production was attributed to enhanced acetoclastic methanogenesis because acetate became rapidly converted to methane during cultivation. The family Fusobacteriaceae and the genus Methanosaeta, the acetoclastic methanogen, predominated in bacteria and archaea, respectively, after the cultivation.
Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2016
Akihisa Kita; Toyokazu Miura; Satoshi Kawata; Takeshi Yamaguchi; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Naomichi Nishio; Yutaka Nakashimada
Methane fermentation is one of the effective approaches for utilization of brown algae; however, this process is limited by the microbial capability to degrade alginate, a main polysaccharide found in these algae. Despite its potential, little is known about anaerobic microbial degradation of alginate. Here we constructed a bacterial consortium able to anaerobically degrade alginate. Taxonomic classification of 16S rRNA gene, based on high-throughput sequencing data, revealed that this consortium included two dominant strains, designated HUA-1 and HUA-2; these strains were related to Clostridiaceae bacterium SK082 (99%) and Dysgonomonas capnocytophagoides (95%), respectively. Alginate lyase activity and metagenomic analyses, based on high-throughput sequencing data, revealed that this bacterial consortium possessed putative genes related to a predicted alginate metabolic pathway. However, HUA-1 and 2 did not grow on agar medium with alginate by using roll-tube method, suggesting the existence of bacterial interactions like symbiosis for anaerobic alginate degradation.
Bioresource Technology | 2016
Toyokazu Miura; Akihisa Kita; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Yutaka Nakashimada
Acclimated marine sediment-derived culture was used for semi-continuous methane production from materials equivalent to raw brown algae, without dilution of salinity and without nutrient supply, under 3 consecutive conditions of varying organic loading rates (OLRs) and hydraulic retention time (HRT). Methane production was stable at 2.0gVS/kg/day (39-day HRT); however, it became unstable at 2.9gVS/kg/day (28-day HRT) due to acetate and propionate accumulation. OLR subsequently decreased to 1.7gVS/kg/day (46-day HRT), stabilizing methane production beyond steady state. Methane yield was above 300mL/g VS at all OLRs. These results indicated that the acclimated marine sediment culture was able to produce methane semi-continuously from raw brown algae without dilution and nutrient supply under steady state. Microbial community analysis suggested that hydrogenotrophic methanogens predominated among archaea during unstable methane production, implying a partial shift of the methanogenic pathway from acetoclastic methanogenesis to acetate oxidation.
Gene | 2014
Kenichiro Tsukahara; Akihisa Kita; Yutaka Nakashimada; Tamotsu Hoshino; Katsuji Murakami
We determined a draft genome sequence for Moorella thermoacetica strain Y72, a syngas-assimilating bacterium with high transformation efficiency. This strain was confirmed to be M. thermoacetica because its overall genome sequence characteristics were similar to those of M. thermoacetica strain ATCC39073. Y72 was confirmed to carry all the genes encoding the enzymes in the reductive acetyl-CoA pathway, with very high similarities to those of ATCC39073. In addition, it was confirmed to assimilate carbon dioxide using this pathway. However, although both Y72 and ATCC39073 carried common genes encoding several enzymes related to the reductive tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, their gene sets were different. Our results suggested that the reason for higher transformation efficiency in Y72 than that in ATCC39073, a reference strain of M. thermoacetica, may be that Y72 possesses only 2 sets of genes considered to be involved in a restriction-modification system, which was half of those found in ATCC39073.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2015
Akihisa Kita; Toyokazu Miura; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Yutaka Nakashimada
Gram-stain-negative, facultatively anaerobic, non-motile, non-spore-forming, rod-shaped bacterium, designated strain HUA-2T, was isolated from an alginate-degrading microbial consortium. Strain HUA-2T was related to Dysgonomonas capnocytophagoides JCM 16697T, Dysgonomonas macrotermitis JCM 19375T and Dysgonomonas mossii CCUG 43457T with 95.1 %, 94.1 % and 92.1 % 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity, respectively. The optimal growth temperature and pH for strain HUA-2T were 35 °C and pH 8.0, respectively. Enzyme production, major fermentation products from glucose, and the major cellular fatty acids were different from those of D. capnocytophagoides CCUG 17966T or other members of the genus Dysgonomonas. Therefore, strain HUA-2T is proposed to represent a novel species of the genus Dysgonomonas, for which we propose the name Dysgonomonas alginatilytica sp. nov. The type strain is HUA-2T ( = DSM 100214T = HUT 8134T).
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2017
Yuki Iwasaki; Akihisa Kita; Koichiro Yoshida; Takahisa Tajima; Shinichi Yano; Tomohiro Shou; Masahiro Saito; Junichi Kato; Katsuji Murakami; Yutaka Nakashimada
ABSTRACT For the efficient production of target metabolites from carbohydrates, syngas, or H2-CO2 by genetically engineered Moorella thermoacetica, the control of acetate production (a main metabolite of M. thermoacetica) is desired. Although propanediol utilization protein (PduL) was predicted to be a phosphotransacetylase (PTA) involved in acetate production in M. thermoacetica, this has not been confirmed. Our findings described herein directly demonstrate that two putative PduL proteins, encoded by Moth_0864 (pduL1) and Moth_1181 (pduL2), are involved in acetate formation as PTAs. To disrupt these genes, we replaced each gene with a lactate dehydrogenase gene from Thermoanaerobacter pseudethanolicus ATCC 33223 (T-ldh). The acetate production from fructose as the sole carbon source by the pduL1 deletion mutant was not deficient, whereas the disruption of pduL2 significantly decreased the acetate yield to approximately one-third that of the wild-type strain. The double-deletion (both pduL genes) mutant did not produce acetate but produced only lactate as the end product from fructose. These results suggest that both pduL genes are associated with acetate formation via acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) and that their disruption enables a shift in the homoacetic pathway to the genetically synthesized homolactic pathway via pyruvate. IMPORTANCE This is the first report, to our knowledge, on the experimental identification of PTA genes in M. thermoacetica and the shift of the native homoacetic pathway to the genetically synthesized homolactic pathway by their disruption on a sugar platform.
Bioresource Technology | 2017
Farida Rahayu; Yuto Kawai; Yuki Iwasaki; Koichiro Yoshida; Akihisa Kita; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Katsuji Murakami; Tamotsu Hoshino; Yutaka Nakashimada
A transformant of Moorella thermoacetica was constructed for thermophilic ethanol production from lignocellulosic biomass by deleting two phosphotransacetylase genes, pdul1 and pdul2, and introducing the native aldehyde dehydrogenase gene (aldh) controlled by the promoter from glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The transformant showed tolerance to 540mM and fermented sugars including fructose, glucose, galactose and xylose to mainly ethanol. In a mixed-sugar medium of glucose and xylose, all of the sugars were consumed to produce ethanol at the yield of 1.9mol/mol-sugar. The transformant successfully fermented sugars in hydrolysate prepared through the acid hydrolysis of lignocellulose to ethanol, suggesting that this transformant can be used to ferment the sugars in lignocellulosic biomass for ethanol production.
Bioresource Technology | 2017
Toyokazu Miura; Akihisa Kita; Yoshiko Okamura; Tsunehiro Aki; Yukihiko Matsumura; Takahisa Tajima; Junichi Kato; Yutaka Nakashimada
The activation of microbes, which are needed to initiate continuous methane production, can be accomplished by fed-batch methanization. In the present study, marine sediment inoculum was activated by batch mode methanization with repetition of substrate addition using defined organic matter from sugar, protein, or fat at seawater salinity to investigate the potential for application of the activation method to various types of saline waste and microbial community compositions. All substrates had methane potentials close to the theoretical value except for bovine serum albumin (BSA) whose methane potential was lower, but the maximum methane potential reached the value during repeated methanization. Beta diversity analysis revealed that substrate (especially BSA)-fed and non-fed cultures had distinct microbial community compositions. Bacterial members depended on substrate. Thus, marine sediment inocula activated via the methanization method can be used to effectively treat various types of saline waste.
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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