Department of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
mBio. 2018 Feb 27;9(1):e02203-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02203-17.
While typically investigated as a microorganism capable of extracellular electron transfer to minerals or anodes, MR-1 can also facilitate electron flow from a cathode to terminal electron acceptors, such as fumarate or oxygen, thereby providing a model system for a process that has significant environmental and technological implications. This work demonstrates that cathodic electrons enter the electron transport chain of when oxygen is used as the terminal electron acceptor. The effect of electron transport chain inhibitors suggested that a proton gradient is generated during cathode oxidation, consistent with the higher cellular ATP levels measured in cathode-respiring cells than in controls. Cathode oxidation also correlated with an increase in the cellular redox (NADH/FMNH) pool determined with a bioluminescence assay, a proton uncoupler, and a mutant of proton-pumping NADH oxidase complex I. This work suggested that the generation of NADH/FMNH under cathodic conditions was linked to reverse electron flow mediated by complex I. A decrease in cathodic electron uptake was observed in various mutant strains, including those lacking the extracellular electron transfer components necessary for anodic-current generation. While no cell growth was observed under these conditions, here we show that cathode oxidation is linked to cellular energy acquisition, resulting in a quantifiable reduction in the cellular decay rate. This work highlights a potential mechanism for cell survival and/or persistence on cathodes, which might extend to environments where growth and division are severely limited. The majority of our knowledge of the physiology of extracellular electron transfer derives from studies of electrons moving to the exterior of the cell. The physiological mechanisms and/or consequences of the reverse processes are largely uncharacterized. This report demonstrates that when coupled to oxygen reduction, electrode oxidation can result in cellular energy acquisition. This respiratory process has potentially important implications for how microorganisms persist in energy-limited environments, such as reduced sediments under changing redox conditions. From an applied perspective, this work has important implications for microbially catalyzed processes on electrodes, particularly with regard to understanding models of cellular conversion of electrons from cathodes to microbially synthesized products.
当 MR-1 通常被研究为一种能够将电子从细胞外转移到矿物或阳极的微生物时,它也可以促进电子从阴极流向末端电子受体,如延胡索酸盐或氧气,从而为一种具有重要环境和技术意义的过程提供了模型系统。这项工作表明,当氧气作为末端电子受体时,阴极电子进入了的电子传递链。电子传递链抑制剂的作用表明,在阴极氧化过程中会产生质子梯度,这与在阴极呼吸细胞中测量到的比对照细胞更高的细胞 ATP 水平一致。阴极氧化也与细胞氧化还原(NADH/FMNH)池的增加有关,该增加是通过生物发光测定法、质子解偶联剂和质子泵 NADH 氧化酶复合物 I 的突变体来确定的。这项工作表明,在阴极条件下生成的 NADH/FMNH 与由复合物 I 介导的反向电子流有关。在各种突变菌株中观察到阴极电子摄取减少,包括那些缺乏产生阳极电流所需的细胞外电子转移组件的菌株。虽然在这些条件下没有观察到细胞生长,但我们在这里表明,阴极氧化与细胞能量获取有关,导致细胞衰减率可量化减少。这项工作强调了细胞在阴极上存活和/或持续存在的潜在机制,这可能扩展到生长和分裂受到严重限制的环境。我们对细胞外电子转移生理学的大部分了解都来自于研究电子向细胞外部移动的研究。反向过程的生理机制和/或后果在很大程度上尚未得到描述。本报告表明,当与氧气还原偶联时,电极氧化可以导致细胞能量获取。这种呼吸过程对于微生物在能量有限的环境中(如在变化的氧化还原条件下减少的沉积物)持续存在具有潜在的重要意义。从应用的角度来看,这项工作对电极上微生物催化的过程具有重要意义,特别是在理解从阴极到微生物合成产物的细胞电子转换模型方面。