Function, Structure, and Gene Expression in Electroactive Bacteria
Description
Electroactive bacteria connect biology to electricity, acting as livingelectrochemical catalysts. In nature, these bacteria can respire insoluble compounds like
iron oxides, and in the laboratory, they are able to respire an electrode and produce an
electrical current. This document investigates two of these electroactive bacteria:
Geobacter sulfurreducens and Thermincola ferriacetica. G. sulfurreducens is a Gramnegative iron-reducing soil bacterium, and T. ferriacetica is a thermophilic, Grampositive bacterium that can reduce iron minerals and several other electron acceptors.
Respiring insoluble electron acceptors like metal oxides presents challenges to a
bacterium. The organism must extend its electron transport chain from the inner
membrane outside the cell and across a significant distance to the surface of the electron
acceptor. G. sulfurreducens is one of the most-studied electroactive bacteria, and despite
this there are many gaps in knowledge about its mechanisms for transporting electrons
extracellularly. Research in this area is complicated by the presence of multiple pathways
that may be concurrently expressed. I used cyclic voltammetry to determine which
pathways are present in electroactive biofilms of G. sulfurreducens grown under different
conditions and correlated this information with gene expression data from the same
conditions. This correlation presented several genes that may be components of specific
pathways not just at the inner membrane but along the entire respiratory pathway, and I
propose an updated model of the pathways in this organism. I also characterized the
composition of G. sulfurreducens and found that it has high iron and lipid content
independent of growth condition, and the high iron content is explained by the large
abundance of multiheme cytochrome expression that I observed. I used multiple
microscopy techniques to examine extracellular respiration in G. sulfurreducens, and in
the process discovered a novel organelle: the intracytoplasmic membrane. I show 3D
reconstructions of the organelle in G. sulfurreducens and discuss its implications for the
cell’s metabolism. Finally, I discuss gene expression in T. ferriacetica in RNA samples
collected from an anode-respiring culture and highlight the most abundantly expressed
genes related to anode-respiring metabolism.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022
Agent
- Author (aut): Howley, Ethan Thomas
- Thesis advisor (ths): Torres, César I
- Thesis advisor (ths): Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa
- Committee member: Nannenga, Brent
- Publisher (pbl): Arizona State University