A hybrid approach combining water-splitting electrochemistry and H2-oxidizing, CO2-fixing microorganisms offers a viable solution for producing value-added chemicals from sunlight, water, and air. The classic wisdom without thorough examination to date assumes that the electrochemistry in such a H2-mediated process is innocent of altering microbial behavior. Here, we report unexpected metabolic rewiring induced by water-splitting electrochemistry in H2-oxidizing acetogenic bacterium Sporomusa ovata that challenges such a classic view. We found that the planktonic S. ovata is more efficient in utilizing reducing equivalent for ATP generation in the materials-biology hybrids than cells grown with H2supply, supported by our metabolomic and proteomic studies. The efficiency of utilizing reducing equivalents and fixing CO2into acetate has increased from less than 80% of chemoautotrophy to more than 95% under electroautotrophic conditions. These observations unravel previously underappreciated materials' impact on microbial metabolism in seemingly simply H2-mediated charge transfer between biotic and abiotic components. Such a deeper understanding of the materials-biology interface will foster advanced design of hybrid systems for sustainable chemical transformation.
CITATION STYLE
Xie, Y., Ersan, S., Guan, X., Wang, J., Sha, J., Xu, S., … Liu, C. (2023). Unexpected metabolic rewiring of CO2fixation in H2-mediated materials-biology hybrids. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(42). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2308373120
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