AI Chat Paper
Note: Please note that the following content is generated by AMiner AI. SciOpen does not take any responsibility related to this content.
{{lang === 'zh_CN' ? '文章概述' : 'Summary'}}
{{lang === 'en_US' ? '中' : 'Eng'}}
Chat more with AI
Home mLife Article
PDF (2.9 MB)
Collect
Submit Manuscript AI Chat Paper
Show Outline
Outline
Show full outline
Hide outline
Outline
Show full outline
Hide outline
Original Research | Open Access

Different outer membrane c-type cytochromes are involved in direct interspecies electron transfer to Geobacter or Methanosarcina species

Dawn E. Holmes1,2,# ( )Jinjie Zhou1,3,#Jessica A. Smith1,4Caiqin Wang1,5Xinying Liu1,6Derek R. Lovley1 
Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts‐Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Department of Physical and Biological Science, Western New England University, Springfield, Massachusetts, USA
Institute for Advanced Study, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China
Department of Biomolecular Sciences, Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, Connecticut, USA
College of Environment, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, China
College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, China

#Dawn E. Holmes and Jinjie Zhou contributed equally to this study.

Edited by Yunfeng Yang, Tsinghua University, China

Show Author Information

Abstract

Direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) may be most important in methanogenic environments, but mechanistic studies of DIET to date have primarily focused on cocultures in which fumarate was the terminal electron acceptor. To better understand DIET with methanogens, the transcriptome of Geobacter metallireducens during DIET-based growth with G. sulfurreducens reducing fumarate was compared with G. metallireducens grown in coculture with diverse Methanosarcina. The transcriptome of G. metallireducens cocultured with G. sulfurreducens was significantly different from those with Methanosarcina. Furthermore, the transcriptome of G. metallireducens grown with Methanosarcina barkeri, which lacks outer-surface c-type cytochromes, differed from those of G. metallireducens cocultured with M. acetivorans or M. subterranea, which have an outer-surface c-type cytochrome that serves as an electrical connect for DIET. Differences in G. metallireducens expression patterns for genes involved in extracellular electron transfer were particularly notable. Cocultures with c-type cytochrome deletion mutant strains, ∆Gmet_0930, ∆Gmet_0557 and ∆Gmet_2896, never became established with G. sulfurreducens but adapted to grow with all three Methanosarcina. Two porin–cytochrome complexes, PccF and PccG, were important for DIET; however, PccG was more important for growth with Methanosarcina. Unlike cocultures with G. sulfurreducens and M. acetivorans, electrically conductive pili were not needed for growth with M. barkeri. Shewanella oneidensis, another electroactive microbe with abundant outer-surface c-type cytochromes, did not grow via DIET. The results demonstrate that the presence of outer-surface c-type cytochromes does not necessarily confer the capacity for DIET and emphasize the impact of the electron-accepting partner on the physiology of the electron-donating DIET partner.

References

【1】
【1】
 
 
mLife
Pages 272-286

{{item.num}}

Comments on this article

Go to comment

< Back to all reports

Review Status: {{reviewData.commendedNum}} Commended , {{reviewData.revisionRequiredNum}} Revision Required , {{reviewData.notCommendedNum}} Not Commended Under Peer Review

Review Comment

Close
Close
Cite this article:
Holmes DE, Zhou J, Smith JA, et al. Different outer membrane c-type cytochromes are involved in direct interspecies electron transfer to Geobacter or Methanosarcina species. mLife, 2022, 1(3): 272-286. https://doi.org/10.1002/mlf2.12037

1033

Views

11

Downloads

42

Crossref

30

Web of Science

31

Scopus

0

CSCD

Received: 26 April 2022
Accepted: 26 July 2022
Published: 23 September 2022
© 2022 The Authors. mLife published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd. on behalf of Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.