Toward understanding long-distance extracellular electron transport in an electroautotrophic microbial communityElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ee02106a

Microbial electrosynthesis (ME) seeks to use electroautotrophy (the reduction of CO 2 by microbial electrode catalysts) to generate useful multi-carbon compounds. It combines the utility of electrosynthesis with the durability of microorganisms and potential to engineer microbial metabolic processes...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Yates, Matthew D, Eddie, Brian J, Kotloski, Nicholas J, Lebedev, Nikolai, Malanoski, Anthony P, Lin, Baochuan, Strycharz-Glaven, Sarah M, Tender, Leonard M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 02.11.2016
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1754-5692
1754-5706
DOI10.1039/c6ee02106a

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Microbial electrosynthesis (ME) seeks to use electroautotrophy (the reduction of CO 2 by microbial electrode catalysts) to generate useful multi-carbon compounds. It combines the utility of electrosynthesis with the durability of microorganisms and potential to engineer microbial metabolic processes. Central to achieving efficient ME is understanding the extracellular electron transport (EET) processes that enable certain microorganisms to utilize electrodes as metabolic electron donors. The Marinobacter-Chromatiaceae-Labrenzia (MCL) biocathode is an electroautotrophic biofilm-forming microbial community enriched from seawater that grows aerobically on gold or graphite cathodes, which we study to understand the mechanisms underpinning electroautotrophy. Evidence suggests that MCL reduces O 2 using the cathode as its sole electron donor, directing a portion of the acquired electrons and energy to fix CO 2 for biomass. A key feature of MCL is that it grows at +310 mV vs. SHE. Here, we apply electrochemical gating measurements, originally developed to study electron transport through polymer films, to study EET through living MCL biofilms. The results indicate that MCL biofilms employ a redox conduction mechanism to transport electrons across the biofilm/electrode interface and into the biofilm over multiple cell lengths (at least 5 μm) away from the electrode surface. In addition to making living MCL biofilms electrically conductive (60 μS cm −1 at 30 °C - more than 10 times greater conductivity than any other living microbial biofilm for which reliable measurements have been made), it enables electron uptake by cells not in direct contact with the electrode surface, which has not been previously reported for any biocathode. Confocal resonance Raman microscopy confirms the presence of c -type cytochromes as the putative redox cofactors involved in LD-EET, consistent with the activation energy for LD-EET obtained from the temperature dependency of the electrochemical gating measurements. These results provide the first report and mechanistic characterization of long-distance EET occurring within a multi-cell thick electroautotrophic biofilm - key milestones toward rational design and optimization of viable ME systems. Here we show that long-distance extracellular electron transport occurs in a cathodic biofilm capable of CO 2 fixation and O 2 respiration.
AbstractList Microbial electrosynthesis (ME) seeks to use electroautotrophy (the reduction of CO 2 by microbial electrode catalysts) to generate useful multi-carbon compounds. It combines the utility of electrosynthesis with the durability of microorganisms and potential to engineer microbial metabolic processes. Central to achieving efficient ME is understanding the extracellular electron transport (EET) processes that enable certain microorganisms to utilize electrodes as metabolic electron donors. The Marinobacter-Chromatiaceae-Labrenzia (MCL) biocathode is an electroautotrophic biofilm-forming microbial community enriched from seawater that grows aerobically on gold or graphite cathodes, which we study to understand the mechanisms underpinning electroautotrophy. Evidence suggests that MCL reduces O 2 using the cathode as its sole electron donor, directing a portion of the acquired electrons and energy to fix CO 2 for biomass. A key feature of MCL is that it grows at +310 mV vs. SHE. Here, we apply electrochemical gating measurements, originally developed to study electron transport through polymer films, to study EET through living MCL biofilms. The results indicate that MCL biofilms employ a redox conduction mechanism to transport electrons across the biofilm/electrode interface and into the biofilm over multiple cell lengths (at least 5 μm) away from the electrode surface. In addition to making living MCL biofilms electrically conductive (60 μS cm −1 at 30 °C - more than 10 times greater conductivity than any other living microbial biofilm for which reliable measurements have been made), it enables electron uptake by cells not in direct contact with the electrode surface, which has not been previously reported for any biocathode. Confocal resonance Raman microscopy confirms the presence of c -type cytochromes as the putative redox cofactors involved in LD-EET, consistent with the activation energy for LD-EET obtained from the temperature dependency of the electrochemical gating measurements. These results provide the first report and mechanistic characterization of long-distance EET occurring within a multi-cell thick electroautotrophic biofilm - key milestones toward rational design and optimization of viable ME systems. Here we show that long-distance extracellular electron transport occurs in a cathodic biofilm capable of CO 2 fixation and O 2 respiration.
Author Strycharz-Glaven, Sarah M
Yates, Matthew D
Eddie, Brian J
Tender, Leonard M
Lebedev, Nikolai
Kotloski, Nicholas J
Malanoski, Anthony P
Lin, Baochuan
AuthorAffiliation Naval Research Laboratory
George Mason University
National Research Council
Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: Naval Research Laboratory
– name: Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering
– name: National Research Council
– name: George Mason University
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Matthew D
  surname: Yates
  fullname: Yates, Matthew D
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Brian J
  surname: Eddie
  fullname: Eddie, Brian J
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Nicholas J
  surname: Kotloski
  fullname: Kotloski, Nicholas J
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Nikolai
  surname: Lebedev
  fullname: Lebedev, Nikolai
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Anthony P
  surname: Malanoski
  fullname: Malanoski, Anthony P
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Baochuan
  surname: Lin
  fullname: Lin, Baochuan
– sequence: 7
  givenname: Sarah M
  surname: Strycharz-Glaven
  fullname: Strycharz-Glaven, Sarah M
– sequence: 8
  givenname: Leonard M
  surname: Tender
  fullname: Tender, Leonard M
BookMark eNqFjz1Pw0AMhk-oSLSFhR3JbDCkXBKaqKwQRCeGdo_ci1MO3ZfuLkB_Hv-MQ2rFgATTa_uxH8kTNjLWEGPnOZ_lvFzciIqIFzmv8IiN83p-m81rXo0OdbUoTtgkhFfOq4LXizH7XNt39B0MpiMfIppOmi0oa7ZZJ797QUAf0aMgpQaFHkiRiN4aSEMTnPURpAE0B4BDtCncixSgpfB2I1GBsFoPRsZdsz9PNAzOKdJkIvpdkvTWa4wyqa-a1fIa8A2lwo2iGayI4OF5eQe_Hz1lxz2qQGf7nLKLx2Z9_5T5IFrnpU7y9me9nLLLv3jrur78z_EF9FJ2-g
ContentType Journal Article
DOI 10.1039/c6ee02106a
DatabaseTitleList
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Engineering
EISSN 1754-5706
EndPage 3558
ExternalDocumentID c6ee02106a
GroupedDBID -JG
0-7
705
70~
7~J
AAEMU
ABGFH
ACLDK
ADSRN
AEFDR
AFVBQ
AGSTE
AUDPV
BSQNT
C6K
EE0
EF-
GNO
H~N
J3I
RCNCU
RPMJG
RRC
RSCEA
SKA
SLH
SMJ
ID FETCH-rsc_primary_c6ee02106a3
ISSN 1754-5692
IngestDate Sat Jun 01 02:29:22 EDT 2019
Mon Jan 28 17:15:14 EST 2019
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly true
Issue 11
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-rsc_primary_c6ee02106a3
Notes 10.1039/c6ee02106a
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
PageCount 15
ParticipantIDs rsc_primary_c6ee02106a
ProviderPackageCode J3I
ACLDK
RRC
7~J
AEFDR
70~
GNO
RCNCU
SLH
EE0
RSCEA
AFVBQ
C6K
H~N
0-7
RPMJG
SKA
-JG
AGSTE
AUDPV
EF-
BSQNT
SMJ
ADSRN
ABGFH
705
AAEMU
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20161102
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2016-11-02
PublicationDate_xml – month: 11
  year: 2016
  text: 20161102
  day: 2
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationYear 2016
References_xml – issn: 1996
  end-page: p 161-176
  publication-title: Biophysical Techniques in Photosynthesis
  doi: Bruno
– issn: 2015
  end-page: p 177-210
  publication-title: Biofilms in Bioelectrochemical Systems
  doi: Boyd Snider Erickson Roy Strycharz-Glaven Tender Beyenal Babauta
– issn: 2009
  publication-title: Gaussian 09, Revision E.01
  doi: Frisch Trucks Schlegel Scuseria Robb Cheeseman Scalmani Barone Mennucci Petersson Nakatsuji Caricato Li Hratchian Izmaylov Bloino Zheng Sonnenberg Hada Ehara Toyota Fukuda Hasegawa Ishida Nakajima Honda Kitao Nakai Vreven Montgomery, Jr. Peralta Ogliaro Bearpark Heyd Brothers Kudin Staroverov Kobayashi Normand Raghavachari Rendell Burant Iyengar Tomasi Cossi Rega Millam Klene Knox Cross Bakken Adamo Jaramillo Gomperts Stratmann Yazyev Austin Cammi Pomelli Ochterski Martin Morokuma Zakrzewski Voth Salvador Dannenberg Dapprich Daniels Farkas Foresman Ortiz Cioslowski Fox
SSID ssj0062079
Score 4.3932357
Snippet Microbial electrosynthesis (ME) seeks to use electroautotrophy (the reduction of CO 2 by microbial electrode catalysts) to generate useful multi-carbon...
SourceID rsc
SourceType Enrichment Source
Publisher
StartPage 3544
Title Toward understanding long-distance extracellular electron transport in an electroautotrophic microbial communityElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ee02106a
Volume 9
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1NT9tAEF2l4dIeqkKLCi1oDhxaIadJ_AHmRsGIUKCHphI9RWt73VpN7cg4SPDHOPPPOrNre9fCldpenGhHtpKdt7Oz45k3jO1QpoVwaH3bsbBwx-fWvhO6VuImHr0VSrhk57-49E6_OmdX7lWvd29kLS3LcBDdddaV_I9WcQz1SlWy_6DZ5qE4gN9Rv3hFDeP173Qsc15lK1tdoDLPs-9WTG4hrVm0vQWn6LxMN62b3lBnCMVpTvEOXOKVgC_LHD8WP9Jo91cqOZokf4gsIilvA90z55q6garM84JKB5siSHJZgy8TijbwG57OqTRrgCZJ7B5_nsj4gyzBJ_7RyBOCDoNeszV8I89XlRDJNuQ6HzmIY_Um5WNBJqmJbn_Ky3le9d5GVNNJ_VpLzxE8Mc6qFP5EWWpGOUaeLPczAp_o5TiW66m-eQNhjO0NPdOa-yZoR4Zptl1FNFlt80Qr37mFdM5Am5JbC5-wlTGeT4Z9tnIYTCfntRPgjYeS5rH52TUzru1_0HejP1PUfWakPzN9wZ5XBxE4VKhaZT2RrbFnBj3lS_ag8AUtfEELX9DCF9T4ggZfkGbAM3iML2jwBR34gha-wMAXvEN0vQeNLUBsAWLrAB7_9Vds6ySYHp1aOAGzhSJWmWmxvc76WZ6J1wzCcM8eiX1HCMd3osTnw9gPxwkPfdx7ksjfYOvdz9hgm92C2SJONv901xv2VOPvLeuXxVJsod9ZhtuVjn8DGA-PtQ
linkProvider Royal Society of Chemistry
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Toward+understanding+long-distance+extracellular+electron+transport+in+an+electroautotrophic+microbial+communityElectronic+supplementary+information+%28ESI%29+available.+See+DOI%3A+10.1039%2Fc6ee02106a&rft.au=Yates%2C+Matthew+D&rft.au=Eddie%2C+Brian+J&rft.au=Kotloski%2C+Nicholas+J&rft.au=Lebedev%2C+Nikolai&rft.date=2016-11-02&rft.issn=1754-5692&rft.eissn=1754-5706&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=3544&rft.epage=3558&rft_id=info:doi/10.1039%2Fc6ee02106a&rft.externalDocID=c6ee02106a
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1754-5692&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1754-5692&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1754-5692&client=summon