Abstract

Biocathodes provide a stable electron source to drive reduction reactions in electrotrophic microbial electrochemical systems. Electroautotrophic biocathode communities may be more robust than monocultures in environmentally relevant settings, but some members are not easily cultivated outside the electrode environment. We previously used metagenomics and metaproteomics to propose a pathway for coupling extracellular electron transfer (EET) to carbon fixation in "Candidatus Tenderia electrophaga," an uncultivated but dominant member of an electroautotrophic biocathode community. Here we validate and refine this proposed pathway using metatranscriptomics of replicate aerobic biocathodes poised at the growth potential level of 310mV and the suboptimal 470mV (versus the standard hydrogen electrode). At both potentials, transcripts were more abundant from "Ca. Tenderia electrophaga" than from any other constituent, and its relative activity was positively correlated with current. Several genes encoding key components of the proposed "Ca. Tenderia electrophaga" EET pathway were more highly expressed at 470mV, consistent with a need for cells to acquire more electrons to obtain the same amount of energy as at 310mV. These included cyc2, encoding a homolog of a protein known to be involved in iron oxidation. Mean expression of all CO2 fixation-related genes is 0.27 log2-fold higher at 310mV, indicating that reduced energy availability at 470mV decreased CO2 fixation. Our results substantiate the claim that "Ca. Tenderia electrophaga" is the key electroautotroph, which will help guide further development of this community for microbial electrosynthesis. IMPORTANCE 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 "Candidatus Tenderia electrophaga" directly couples extracellular electron transfer to CO2 fixation. Our results provide insight into developing biocathode technology, such as microbial electrosynthesis, as well as advancing our understanding of chemolithoautotrophy.

Highlights

  • Biocathodes provide a stable electron source to drive reduction reactions in electrotrophic microbial electrochemical systems

  • Biocathodes have been explored for improving energy recovery in microbial fuel cells (MFCs) and electrode-driven bioremediation and, more recently, to produce chemicals in a process known as microbial electrosynthesis

  • Our characterization of the biocathode-MCL community activity by metatranscriptomics supports previous metaproteomic and 16S rRNA amplicon characterizations of biocathode-MCL indicating that there is substantial variability in the abundance of specific bacteria, even between seemingly identical reactors inoculated on the same day with the same inoculum [10, 19]

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Summary

Introduction

Biocathodes provide a stable electron source to drive reduction reactions in electrotrophic microbial electrochemical systems. We validate and refine this proposed pathway using metatranscriptomics of replicate aerobic biocathodes poised at the growth potential level of 310 mV and the suboptimal 470 mV (versus the standard hydrogen electrode) At both potentials, transcripts were more abundant from “Ca. Tenderia electrophaga” than from any other constituent, and its relative activity was positively correlated with current. Several genes encoding key components of the proposed “Ca. Tenderia electrophaga” EET pathway were more highly expressed at 470 mV, consistent with a need for cells to acquire more electrons to obtain the same amount of energy as at 310 mV. These included cyc, encoding a homolog of a protein known to be involved in iron oxidation. More-precise quantification of the changes in relative gene expression obtained using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) [24] can be used to understand the molecular mechanisms used for growth on the cathode

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