Microbiologist Derek Lovley and
colleaugues at UMass Amherst report finding electrically conducting pili
or 'e-pili' in more bacteria species than just the original Geobacter
discovery he made 30 years ago.
Microbiologists led by Derek Lovley at the
University of Massachusetts Amherst, who is internationally known for
having discovered electrically conducting microfilaments or "nanowires"
in the bacterium Geobacter, announce in a new paper this month that they
have discovered the unexpected structures in many other species,
greatly broadening the research field on electrically conducting
filaments. Details appear online in the International Society of Microbial Ecology Journal.
Lovley, who published his first paper describing Geobacter 30 years
ago, explains, "Geobacter have evolved these special filaments with a
very short basic subunit called a pilin that assemble to form long
chains that resemble a twisted rope. Most bacteria have a basic subunit
that is two to three times longer. Having electrically conducting pili
or e-pili is a recent evolutionary event in Geobacter, so the working
hypothesis was that this ability would only be found in its close
relatives."
He adds, "It was surprising to us, and I think many people will be
surprised to learn, that the concept that microbes need the short pilin
subunit to produce e-pili is wrong. We have found that some much larger
pilins can also yield e-pili and that the ability to express e-pili has
arisen independently multiple times in the evolution of diverse
microbial groups." He and co-authors add that "e-pili can have an
important role in the biogeochemical cycling of carbon and metals and
have potential applications as 'green' electronic materials."
Lovley says, "This is a great development, because now the field will
widen. Microbiologists now know that they can work with other microbes
to investigate electrically conductive filaments. We've found a broad
range of microbes that have this. One interesting thing we already can
report is that some of the new bacteria we've identified have filaments
up to 10 nanometers in diameter. Geobacter's filament are very thin,
just three nanometers in diameter. For building electronic devices like
nanowire sensors, it is a lot easier to manipulate fatter wires. It will
also be more straightforward to elucidate the structural features that
confer conductivity with the thicker wires because it is easier to solve
their structure."
He hopes the discovery of additional electrically conducting protein
nanowires will contribute to a much-needed "green," sustainable
revolution in electronics manufacturing. "Our current system of using
considerable energy and rare resources to produce electronics, then
throwing them away in toxic waste dumps overseas, is not sustainable,"
Lovley says. Producing electronic biological materials with microbes can
be achieved without harsh chemicals and requires lower energy inputs,
he points out. "And the microbes eat cheaply. In the case of Geobacter,
we basically feed them vinegar."
Lovley and colleagues report that "strains of G. sulfurreducens
producing high current densities, which are only possible with e-pili,
were obtained with pilin genes from Flexistipes sinusarabici,
Calditerrivibrio nitroreducens and Desulfurivibrio alkaliphilus. The
conductance of pili from these strains was comparable to native G.
sulfurreducens e-pili."
In recent years, the UMass Amherst microbiologists and physicists
working with Geobacter species developed a hypothesis for how its e-pili
are able to conduct electric current based on the presence of aromatic
amino acids in the pilin subunits. They have used this characteristic --
a high density of aromatic amino acids and a lack of substantial
aromatic-free gaps along pilin chains -- to select candidate pili genes
from other microorganisms, including many difficult-to-culture
microorganisms.
Using this technique "reveals new sources for biologically based
electronic materials and suggests that a wide phylogenetic diversity of
microorganisms may use e-pili for extracellular electron exchange," they
report. To test and validate their biological screening results, they
took native pilin genes out of Geobacter and replaced them with
Calditerrivibrio genes, for example, then placed this genetically
modified organism into a microbial fuel cell to see if it would produce
electric current. In several cases, they did, Lovley says.
Lovley discovered Geobacter when he was hired by the U.S. Geological
Survey to conduct its first microbiology project in water quality in the
Potomac River, in particular to understand which microbes were
influencing algal blooms fed by phosphates in river sediments. He
recalls, "Most scientists, including microbiologists, thought that a
chemical reaction was responsible for the iron transformations in the
mud that released associated phosphates as pollution into the water.
However, when we looked into this further, it was clear that
microorganisms were involved and that led us to the discovery of
Geobacter."
Over the years, other unique features of Geobacter have resulted in
many "microbiology firsts" in the fields of biogeochemistry,
bioremediation and renewable energy. Lovley says, "Now Geobacter has
drawn us into electronics. I am excited to find out if these new
electrically conductive protein nanowires from other bacteria might
function even better than the Geobacter wires for applications such as
biomedical sensors. The simple screening method described in our paper
is identifying genes for conductive wires in diverse microorganisms that
may rely on electrical signaling for unique functions of biomedical and
environmental significance."
Comments
Post a Comment