Lack of physiological evidence for cytochrome filaments functioning as conduits for extracellular electron transfer

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Abstract

Extracellular cytochrome filaments are proposed to serve as conduits for long-range extracellular electron transfer. The primary functional physiological evidence has been the reported inhibition of Geobacter sulfurreducens Fe(III) oxide reduction when the gene for the filament-forming cytochrome OmcS is deleted. Here we report that the OmcS-deficient strain from that original report reduces Fe(III) oxide as well as the wild-type, as does a triple mutant in which the genes for the other known filament-forming cytochromes were also deleted. The triple cytochrome mutant displayed filaments with the same 3 nm diameter morphology and conductance as those produced by Escherichia coli heterologously expressing the G. sulfurreducens PilA pilin gene. Fe(III) oxide reduction was inhibited when the pilin gene in cytochrome-deficient mutants was modified to yield poorly conductive 3 nm diameter filaments. The results are consistent with the concept that 3 nm diameter electrically conductive pili (e-pili) are required for G. sulfurreducens long-range extracellular electron transfer. In contrast, rigorous physiological functional evidence is lacking for cytochrome filaments serving as conduits for long-range electron transport.

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Schwarz, I. A., Alsaqri, B., Lekbach, Y., Henry, K., Gorman, S., Woodard, T., … Lovley, D. R. (2024). Lack of physiological evidence for cytochrome filaments functioning as conduits for extracellular electron transfer. MBio, 15(5). https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00690-24

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