Abstract

Riboflavin (RF), as a common electron mediator that can accelerate extracellular electron transfer (EET), is usually used as a probe to confirm EET-microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC). However, the acceleration mechanism of RF on EET-MIC is still unclear, especially the effect on gene expression in bacteria. In this study, a 13-mer antimicrobial peptide E6 and tetrakis hydroxymethyl phosphonium sulfate (THPS) were used as new tools to investigate the acceleration mechanism of RF on Fe0-to-microbe EET in corrosion of EH36 steel caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 60 min after 20 ppm (v/v) THPS and 20 ppm THPS & 100 nM E6 were injected into P. aeruginosa 1 and P. aeruginosa 2 (two glass bottles containing P. aeruginosa with different treatments) at the 3-d incubation, respectively, P. aeruginosa 1 and P. aeruginosa 2 had a similar planktonic cell count, whereas the sessile cell count in P. aeruginosa 1 was 1.3 log higher than that in P. aeruginosa 2. After the 3-d pre-growth and subsequent 7-d incubation, the addition of 20 ppm (w/w) RF increased the weight loss and maximum pit depth of EH36 steel in P. aeruginosa 1 by 0.7 mg cm−2 and 4.1 μm, respectively, while only increasing those in P. aeruginosa 2 by 0.4 mg cm−2 and 1.7 μm, respectively. This suggests that RF can be utilized by P. aeruginosa biofilms since the corrosion rate should be elevated by the same value if it only acts on the planktonic cells. Furthermore, the EET capacity of P. aeruginosa biofilm was enhanced by RF because the protein expression of cytochrome c (Cyt c) gene in sessile cells was significantly increased in the presence of RF, which accelerated EET-MIC by P. aeruginosa against EH36 steel.

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