Harnessing Electricity-generating Bacteria to Clean up Drinking Water

Published on by in Academic

Harnessing Electricity-generating Bacteria to Clean up Drinking Water

Researchers replace membrane proteins in bacteria with a molecule they created and gain control over their ability to produce electricity.

DSFO+ crystals

A humble bacterium first isolated in New York’s Lake Oneida almost 30 years ago could change the world. With its innate ability to generate electricity, the little powerhouse might one day pave the way for making wastewater drinkable.

The bacterium, Shewanella oneidensis,  inspired researchers from the Bazan Research Group at UC Santa Barbara to create a chemically modified microbial fuel cell. Using iron and other minerals, Shewanella produces energy as part of its metabolism and relies on current-conducting proteins in its cell membrane for respiration.

The researchers created an iron-containing molecule, DSFO+, with a structure that could mimic those critical proteins in two mutant Shewanella bacteria. They sought to determine whether incorporating DSFO+ would allow electron transfer in a manner similar to the proteins’ function.

When the scientists examined the effect of DSFO+ on the organism, they discovered that they could not only improve its capacity to produce electricity but also use the molecule to replace the function of the naturally occurring proteins in mutant bacteria.

Their enhancement resulted in the ability to change the behavior of microbial systems so that in the future such organisms could be used to treat wastewater through their electricity generation. Their group’s findings appear in the journal Chem.

“The protein replacement molecule that we constructed modifies the cell membrane so that it facilitates respiration by electron delivery to the membrane surface,” said co-author Guillermo Bazan, a professor in UCSB’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and director of the campus’s Center for Polymers and Organic Solids. “It’s a power-generating trick that gives us an opportunity to look into the behavior of microbial species in a way that didn’t exist before.”

“We aided the metabolism of the bacteria,” explains co-lead author Nathan Kirchhofer, a former UCSB materials graduate student. “I think very few people have approached this from a chemical modification type of approach. We actually just took bacteria as they were and added an external agent that helps with their native process. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time this has been demonstrated.”

Such organism modification is more often done via genetic engineering; however, the microbes that result cannot be released into the environment and are much more challenging to apply in practical applications.

The UCSB method chemically modifies the microbe for a certain amount of time and as the microbe multiplies, the synthetic molecule dilutes and the system goes back to its original state. According to Bazan, this makes it possible to use these microorganisms in wastewater treatment in a way that cannot be done with their genetically modified counterparts.

Co-lead author Zachary Rengert, a UCSB chemistry graduate student, points out that genetic engineering is more complicated and difficult to perform. “Furthermore, genetic engineering is microorganism specific,” he said. “We envision our molecule to be applicable to a wide range of organisms.”

By Julie Cohen

Read more at: The Current

Media

Taxonomy