Extracellular Iron Reduction Is Mediated in Part by Neutral Red and Hydrogenase inEscherichia coli
Open Access
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 70 (6), 3467-3474
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.70.6.3467-3474.2004
Abstract
Both microbial iron reduction and microbial reduction of anodes in fuel cells can occur by way of soluble electron mediators. To test whether neutral red (NR) mediates iron reduction, as it does anode reduction, by Escherichia coli, ferrous iron levels were monitored in anaerobic cultures grown with amorphous iron oxide. Ferrous iron levels were 19.4 times higher in cultures fermenting pyruvate in the presence of NR than in the absence of NR. NR did not stimulate iron reduction in cultures respiring with nitrate. To explore the mechanism of NR-mediated iron reduction, cell extracts of E. coli were used. Cell extract-NADH-NR mixtures had an enzymatic iron reduction rate almost 15-fold higher than the chemical NR-mediated iron reduction rate observed in controls with no cell extract. Hydrogen was consumed during stationary phase (in which iron reduction was detectable) especially in cultures containing both NR and iron oxide. An E. coli hypE mutant, with no hydrogenase activity, was also impaired in NR-mediated iron reduction activity. NR-mediated iron reduction rates by cell extracts were 1.5 to 2 times higher with hydrogen or formate as the electron source than with NADH. Our findings suggest that hydrogenase donates electrons to NR for extracellular iron reduction. This process appears to be analogous to those of iron reduction by bacteria that use soluble electron mediators (e.g., humic acids and 2,6-anthraquinone disulfonate) and of anode reduction by bacteria using soluble mediators (e.g., NR and thionin) in microbial fuel cells.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Improved fuel cell and electrode designs for producing electricity from microbial degradationBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 2002
- How bacteria get energy from hydrogen: a genetic analysis of periplasmic hydrogen oxidation in Escherichia coliInternational Journal of Hydrogen Energy, 2002
- Active transport of iron and siderophore antibioticsCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2002
- Protective Role of tolC in Efflux of the Electron Shuttle Anthraquinone-2,6-DisulfonateJournal of Bacteriology, 2002
- Electrode-Reducing Microorganisms That Harvest Energy from Marine SedimentsScience, 2002
- Isolation and Characterization of a Soluble NADPH-Dependent Fe(III) Reductase from Geobacter sulfurreducensJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- A role for excreted quinones in extracellular electron transferNature, 2000
- Extracellular Iron Reductases: Identification of a New Class of Enzymes by Siderophore-Producing MicroorganismsArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1999
- Electron‐transfer coupling in microbial fuel cells. 2. performance of fuel cells containing selected microorganism—mediator—substrate combinationsJournal of Chemical Technology and Biotechnology, 1984
- Ferrozine---a new spectrophotometric reagent for ironAnalytical Chemistry, 1970