| Literature DB >> 34585977 |
Toshiyuki Ueki1,2, David J F Walker1,2, Kelly P Nevin1, Joy E Ward1, Trevor L Woodard1, Stephen S Nonnenmann2,3, Derek R Lovley1,2.
Abstract
Geobacter sulfurreducens is commonly employed as a model for the study of extracellular electron transport mechanisms in the Geobacter species. Deletion of pilB, which is known to encode the pilus assembly motor protein for type IV pili in other bacteria, has been proposed as an effective strategy for evaluating the role of electrically conductive pili (e-pili) in G. sulfurreducens extracellular electron transfer. In those studies, the inhibition of e-pili expression associated with pilB deletion was not demonstrated directly but was inferred from the observation that pilB deletion mutants produced lower current densities than wild-type cells. Here, we report that deleting pilB did not diminish current production. Conducting probe atomic force microscopy revealed filaments with the same diameter and similar current-voltage response as e-pili harvested from wild-type G. sulfurreducens or when e-pili are expressed heterologously from the G. sulfurreducens pilin gene in Escherichia coli. Immunogold labeling demonstrated that a G. sulfurreducens strain expressing a pilin monomer with a His tag continued to express His tag-labeled filaments when pilB was deleted. These results suggest that a reinterpretation of the results of previous studies on G. sulfurreducens pilB deletion strains may be necessary. IMPORTANCE Geobacter sulfurreducens is a model microbe for the study of biogeochemically and technologically significant processes, such as the reduction of Fe(III) oxides in soils and sediments, bioelectrochemical applications that produce electric current from waste organic matter or drive useful processes with the consumption of renewable electricity, direct interspecies electron transfer in anaerobic digestors and methanogenic soils and sediments, and metal corrosion. Elucidating the phenotypes associated with gene deletions is an important strategy for determining the mechanisms for extracellular electron transfer in G. sulfurreducens. The results reported here demonstrate that we cannot replicate the key phenotype reported for a gene deletion that has been central to the development of models for long-range electron transport in G. sulfurreducens.Entities:
Keywords: Geobacter; conductive pili; electromicrobiology; extracellular electron transfer; protein nanowires
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34585977 PMCID: PMC8557921 DOI: 10.1128/Spectrum.00877-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiol Spectr ISSN: 2165-0497
FIG 1Current production of G. sulfurreducens strains. (a) Data image from reference 32 modified to label each of the different colored curves. (b) Current production for wild-type G. sulfurreducens strain PCA and G. sulfurreducens strain PCA/ΔPilB. The curve for the PCA/ΔPilB strain is representative of 9 replicates which all yielded a maximum current of ≥12 mA. (c) Current production for G. sulfurreducens KN400 strain PilA-WT/PilA-6×His and KN400 strain PilA-WT/PilA-6×His/ΔPilB. The curve for the PilA-WT/PilA-6×His/ΔPilB strain is representative of triplicates which all yielded a maximum current of ≥14 mA. Image in a is reproduced with permission.
FIG 2Expression of 3-nm-diameter electrically conductive filaments in the strain PCA/ΔPilB. (a) Transmission electron micrograph of a negatively stained cell. (b) Atomic force microscopy, noncontact topographical imaging with deflection output of a single filament, harvested from cells, laying on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. (c) Height of the filament at the white line cross-section shown on the filament with the height profile shown in the inset. (d) Point mode IV spectroscopy of the individual G. sulfurreducens strain PCA/ΔPilB filaments shown in red overlaid with wild-type G. sulfurreducens in blue and G. sulfurreducens strain Aro-5 (in which the native PilA gene is replaced with a synthetic pilin gene designed to yield poorly conductive pili) in black. Data for pili from wild-type and strain Aro-5 are from reference 44.
FIG 3Immunogold labeling of pilin-containing filaments from strain PilA-WT/PilA-6×His/ΔPilB. (a) Labeled filaments emanating from cell. (b and c) Higher magnification of labeled filaments.
PilB homologs in G. sulfurreducens
| Gene | Description | Identity (%) | Transcript abundance |
|---|---|---|---|
| GSU1491 | Type IV pilus biogenesis ATPase PilB | 100 | 9.91 |
| GSU0328 | Type II secretion system ATPase GspE | 45 | 10.12 |
| GSU0435 | PilB/PulE/GspE family ATPase | 26 | 6.86 |
| GSU1783 | Type II secretion system ATPase PulE | 38 | 9.70 |
| GSU2609 | PilB/PulE/GspE family ATPase | 40 | 9.50 |
Description is from NCBI reference sequence of G. sulfurreducens.
Identity is based on NCBI BLAST (https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi) with PilB (GSU1491) as the query.
The values (log2 signal) of transcript abundance are from those for growth on a current-producing anode (39).