Coenzyme F430, the prosthetic group of methyl coenzyme M reductase (MCR), is a key compound in methane metabolism. We applied coenzyme F430 as a function-specific biomarker of methanogenesis to subsurface marine sediments collected below the sulfate reduction zone to investigate the distribution and activity of methanogens. In addition, we examined the kinetics of the epimerization of coenzyme F430, which is the first stage of the degradation process after cell death, at various temperatures (4, 15, 34, 60 °C) and pH (5, 7, 9) conditions, which cover conditions of drilled sediments used in this study. The degradation experiments revealed that the kinetics of the epimerization well follow the thermodynamic laws, and the half-life of coenzyme F430 is decreasing from 304 days to 11 h with increasing the temperature. It indicates that the native F430 detected in the sediments is derived from living methanogens, because the abiotic degradation of F430 is much faster than the sedimentation rate and will not be fossilized. Based on coenzyme F430 analysis and degradation experiments, the native form of F430 detected in subseafloor sediments off the Shimokita Peninsula originates from living methanogen cells, which is protected from degradation in cells but disappears soon after cell death. The biomass of methanogens calculated from F430 concentration and F430 contents in cultivable methanogen species decreases by 2 orders of magnitude up to a sediment depth of 2.5 km, with a maximum value at ∼70 m below the seafloor (mbsf), while the proportion of methanogens to the total prokaryotic cell abundance increases with the depth, which is 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than expected previously. Our results indicate the presence of undetectable methanogens using conventional techniques.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00307DOI Listing

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