Are Dehalococcoidia Ubiquitous Environmental Constituents?
Evidence from culture-independent surveys suggests that the class Dehalococcoidia (Dhc) is widespread and an intrinsic member of natural ecosystems rather than a rare specialist confined to contaminated sites. They have been detected in over 88% of uncontaminated soils and in 67 of 68 lake sediment samples across marine, freshwater, and terrestrial settings. Their consistent presence in media unaffected by anthropogenic organohalogens indicates that Dhc are native environmental denizens with broad ecological distribution.
Natural halogen cycling likely drove the evolutionary emergence of Dhc. More than 5,000 naturally occurring organohalogens—predominantly organochlorines—exist in soils and sediments, providing long-standing substrates for reductive dehalogenation. The ability of Dhc to respire these compounds, therefore, reflects adaptation to pre-industrial biochemical niches rather than dependence on anthropogenic pollution.
Finally, Dhc plays a keystone role in anaerobic consortia by scavenging hydrogen, which enables syntrophic partners to sustain otherwise unfavorable metabolisms. This function anchors them within the energy economy of anoxic ecosystems. Combined with their prevalence in pristine systems, this metabolic centrality strongly supports the view that Dhc are ubiquitous environmental constituents poised to respond whenever suitable electron acceptors and partners are present.
Yang, Y., Sanford, R., Yan, J., Chen, G., Cápiro, N.L., Li, X. and Löffler, F.E., 2020. Roles of organohalide-respiring Dehalococcoidia in carbon cycling. Msystems, 5(3), pp.10-1128.