AI Article Synopsis

  • Electroautotrophy is a unique microbial metabolism that shows promise for carbon dioxide storage and conversion into useful chemicals, particularly focusing on a sulfate-reducing bacterium capable of fixing CO into acetyl-CoA.
  • Research has identified that this bacterium utilizes a H-mediated electron uptake method, resulting in significant biomass production and acetate generation under specific conditions, demonstrating its potential for electrosynthesis.
  • The study underscores the importance of CO feeding strategies and hydrogen levels in optimizing biomass growth and acetate production, while also suggesting further exploration of its ability to produce butyrate for bioelectrosynthesis applications.

Article Abstract

Electroautotrophy is a novel and fascinating microbial metabolism, with tremendous potential for CO storage and valorization into chemicals and materials made thereof. Research attention has been devoted toward the characterization of acetogenic and methanogenic electroautotrophs. In contrast, here we characterize the electrophysiology of a sulfate-reducing bacterium, , harboring the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway and, thus, capable of fixing CO into acetyl-CoA. For most electroautotrophs the mode of electron uptake is still not fully clarified. Our electrochemical experiments at different polarization conditions and Fe corrosion tests point to a H- mediated electron uptake ability of this strain. This observation is in line with the lack of outer membrane and periplasmic multi-heme -type cytochromes in this bacterium. Maximum planktonic biomass production and a maximum sulfate reduction rate of 2 ± 0.4 mM day were obtained with an applied cathode potential of -900 mV vs. Ag/AgCl, resulting in an electron recovery in sulfate reduction of 37 ± 1.4%. Anaerobic sulfate respiration is more thermodynamically favorable than acetogenesis. Nevertheless, strains adapted to sulfate-limiting conditions, could be tuned to electrosynthetic production of up to 8 mM of acetate, which compares well with other electroacetogens. The yield per biomass was very similar to H/CO based acetogenesis. Acetate bioelectrosynthesis was confirmed through stable isotope labeling experiments with Na-HCO. Our results highlight a great influence of the CO feeding strategy and start-up H level in the catholyte on planktonic biomass growth and acetate production. In serum bottles experiments, also generated butyrate, which makes even more attractive for bioelectrosynthesis application. A further optimization of these physiological pathways is needed to obtain electrosynthetic butyrate production in biocathodes. This study expands the diversity of facultative autotrophs able to perform H-mediated extracellular electron uptake in Bioelectrochemical Systems (BES). We characterized a sulfate-reducing and acetogenic bacterium, , able to naturally produce acetate and butyrate from CO and H. For any future bioprocess, the exploitation of planktonic growing electroautotrophs with H-mediated electron uptake would allow for a better use of the entire liquid volume of the cathodic reactor and, thus, higher productivities and product yields from CO-rich waste gas streams.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7248197PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2020.00457DOI Listing

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