Enhancement of extracellular electron transfer and bioelectricity output by synthetic porin
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2012 papers
Abstract
The microbial fuel cell (MFC), is a promising environmental biotechnology for harvesting electricity energy from organic wastes. However, low bacterial membrane permeability of electron shuttles is a limiting factor that restricts the electron shuttle-mediated extracellular electron transfer (EET) from bacteria to electrodes, thus the electricity power output of MFCs. To this end, we heterologously expressed a porin protein OprF from Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 into Escherichia coli, which dramatically increased its membrane permeability, delivering a much higher current output in MFCs than its parental strain (BL21). We found that the oprF-expression strain showed more efficient EET than its parental strain. More strikingly, the enhanced membrane permeability also rendered the oprF-expression strain an efficient usage of riboflavin as the electron shuttle, whereas its parental strain was incapable of. Our results substantiated that membrane permeability is crucial for the efficient EET, and indicated that the expression of synthetic porins could be an efficient strategy to enhance bioelectricity generation by microorganisms (including electrogenic bacteria) in MFCs.
Related Papers
- → Antibody response of infected mice to outer membrane proteins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa(1984)42 cited
- → A Major Outer-membrane Protein Functions as a Porin in Haemophilus Influenzae(1987)32 cited
- → Direct in Situ Structural Analysis of Recombinant Outer Membrane Porins Expressed in an OmpA-Deficient Mutant Escherichia coli Strain(1993)18 cited
- → The Role of Outer Membrane Proteins From Gram-Negative Bacteria as VACCINES with Special Emphasis in Typhoid Fever: Monoclonal antibodies against S. typhi porins(1988)4 cited
- → Outer Membrane Protein Purification(2003)4 cited