Metatranscriptomics Supports the Mechanism for Biocathode Electroautotrophy by “CandidatusTenderia electrophaga”


Publication

Citation
Eddie et al. (2017). mSystems 2 (2)
Names (1)
Subjects
Biochemistry Computer Science Applications Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Genetics Microbiology Modelling and Simulation Molecular Biology Physiology
Abstract
Bacteria that directly use electrodes as metabolic electron donors (biocathodes) have been proposed for applications ranging from microbial electrosynthesis to advanced bioelectronics for cellular communication with machines. However, just as we understand very little about oxidation of analogous natural insoluble electron donors, such as iron oxide, the organisms and extracellular electron transfer (EET) pathways underlying the electrode-cell direct electron transfer processes are almost completely unknown. Biocathodes are a stable biofilm cultivation platform to interrogate both the rate and mechanism of EET using electrochemistry and to study the electroautotrophic organisms that catalyze these reactions. Here we provide new evidence supporting the hypothesis that the uncultured bacterium “CandidatusTenderia electrophaga” directly couples extracellular electron transfer to CO2fixation. Our results provide insight into developing biocathode technology, such as microbial electrosynthesis, as well as advancing our understanding of chemolithoautotrophy.
Authors
Eddie, Brian J.; Wang, Zheng; Hervey, W. Judson; Leary, Dagmar H.; Malanoski, Anthony P.; Tender, Leonard M.; Lin, Baochuan; Strycharz-Glaven, Sarah M.
Publication date
2017-04-21
DOI
10.1128/msystems.00002-17 

© 2022-2025 The SeqCode Initiative
  All information contributed to the SeqCode Registry is released under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license