Direct observation of electrically conductive pili emanating from geobacter sulfurreducens

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Abstract

Geobacter sulfurreducens is a model microbe for elucidating the mechanisms for extracellular electron transfer in several biogeochemical cycles, bioelectro-chemical applications, and microbial metal corrosion. Multiple lines of evidence previously suggested that electrically conductive pili (e-pili) are an essential conduit for long-range extracellular electron transport in G. sulfurreducens. However, it has recently been reported that G. sulfurreducens does not express e-pili and that filaments com-prised of multi-heme c-type cytochromes are responsible for long-range electron trans-port. This possibility was directly investigated by examining cells, rather than fila-ment preparations, with atomic force microscopy. Approximately 90% of the filaments emanating from wild-type cells had a diameter (3 nm) and conductance consistent with previous reports of e-pili harvested from G. sulfurreducens or het-erologously expressed in Escherichia coli from the G. sulfurreducens pilin gene. The remaining 10% of filaments had a morphology consistent with filaments com-prised of the c-type cytochrome OmcS. A strain expressing a modified pilin gene designed to yield poorly conductive pili expressed 90% filaments with a 3-nm di-ameter, but greatly reduced conductance, further indicating that the 3-nm diameter conductive filaments in the wild-type strain were e-pili. A strain in which genes for five of the most abundant outer-surface c-type cytochromes, including OmcS, were deleted yielded only 3-nm-diameter filaments with the same conductance as in the wild type. These results demonstrate that e-pili are the most abundant conductive filaments expressed by G. sulfurreducens, consistent with previous functional studies demonstrating the need for e-pili for long-range extracellular electron transfer. IMPORTANCE Electroactive microbes have significant environmental impacts, as well as applications in bioenergy and bioremediation. The composition, function, and even ex-istence of electrically conductive pili (e-pili) has been one of the most contentious areas of investigation in electromicrobiology, in part because e-pili offer a mechanism for long-range electron transport that does not involve the metal cofactors common in much of biological electron transport. This study demonstrates that e-pili are abundant filaments emanating from Geobacter sulfurreducens, which serves as a model for long-range extracellular electron transfer in direct interspecies electron transfer, dissim-ilatory metal reduction, microbe-electrode exchange, and corrosion caused by direct electron uptake from Fe(0). The methods described in this study provide a simple strategy for evaluating the distribution of conductive filaments throughout the microbial world with an approach that avoids artifactual production and/or enrichment of filaments that may not be physiologically relevant.

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Liu, X., Walker, D. J. F., Nonnenmann, S. S., Sun, D., & Lovley, D. R. (2021). Direct observation of electrically conductive pili emanating from geobacter sulfurreducens. MBio, 12(4). https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02209-21

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