Enrichment of halotolerant hydrogen-oxidizing bacteria and production of high-value-added chemical hydroxyectoine using a hybrid biological–inorganic system

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Abstract

Hybrid biological–inorganic (HBI) systems show great promise as CO2 conversion platforms combining CO2 fixation by hydrogen-oxidizing bacteria (HOB) with water splitting. Herein, halotolerant HOB were enriched using an HBI system with a high-ionic-strength medium containing 180 mM phosphate buffer to identify new biocatalysts. The reactors were inoculated with samples from saline environments and applied with a voltage of 2.0 V. Once an increase in biomass was observed with CO2 consumption, an aliquot of the medium was transferred to a new reactor. After two successive subcultures, Achromobacter xylosoxidans strain H1_3_1 and Mycolicibacterium mageritense strain H4_3_1 were isolated from the reactor media. Genome sequencing indicated the presence of genes for aerobic hydrogen-oxidizing chemolithoautotrophy and synthesis of the compatible solute hydroxyectoine in both strains. Furthermore, both strains produced hydroxyectoine in the reactors under the high-ionic-strength condition, suggesting the potential for new HBI systems using halotolerant HOB to produce high-value-added chemicals.

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Feng, X., Kazama, D., He, S., Nakayama, H., Hayashi, T., Tokunaga, T., … Kobayashi, H. (2023). Enrichment of halotolerant hydrogen-oxidizing bacteria and production of high-value-added chemical hydroxyectoine using a hybrid biological–inorganic system. Frontiers in Microbiology, 14. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1254451

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