María Llorente , Abraham Esteve-Núñez , Raúl Berenguer
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Microbial Electrochemical Fluidized Reactors (ME-FBR) changed the paradigm for growing electroactive bacteria from a biofilm strategy to a planktonic mode, while still performing direct extracellular electron transfer from oxidative metabolism in absence of redox mediators. Glassy carbon was the material selected for growing planktonic Geobacter sulfurreducens in ME-FBR. However, the material was unable to retain cells so applications implying continuous operation have been compromised. In this context, a tailor-made chemical strategy was followed considering the large amount of cytochromes C present on the outermost membrane of bacteria form of the Geobacter genus. In this work, a commercial glassy carbon (GC) was chemically modified with surface oxygen groups (SOGs) mainly carboxylic type with high affinity for heme group of cytochrome C. The functionalized material did conserve the structural and textural features and i) promoted the biofilm formation of Geobacter using acetate as sole carbon and electron donor source, and ii) increased the current density and acetate removal rate in comparison with pristine carbon. Thus, the new material enriched in carboxylic-type SOGs facilitates a-la-carte anchorage of electroactive bacteria to move on from a planktonic-based to a biofilm-based strategy, so ME-FBR operation could be expanded from batch to continuous mode, while electrical current was still possible.
期刊介绍:
An International Journal Devoted to Electrochemical Aspects of Biology and Biological Aspects of Electrochemistry
Bioelectrochemistry is an international journal devoted to electrochemical principles in biology and biological aspects of electrochemistry. It publishes experimental and theoretical papers dealing with the electrochemical aspects of:
• Electrified interfaces (electric double layers, adsorption, electron transfer, protein electrochemistry, basic principles of biosensors, biosensor interfaces and bio-nanosensor design and construction.
• Electric and magnetic field effects (field-dependent processes, field interactions with molecules, intramolecular field effects, sensory systems for electric and magnetic fields, molecular and cellular mechanisms)
• Bioenergetics and signal transduction (energy conversion, photosynthetic and visual membranes)
• Biomembranes and model membranes (thermodynamics and mechanics, membrane transport, electroporation, fusion and insertion)
• Electrochemical applications in medicine and biotechnology (drug delivery and gene transfer to cells and tissues, iontophoresis, skin electroporation, injury and repair).
• Organization and use of arrays in-vitro and in-vivo, including as part of feedback control.
• Electrochemical interrogation of biofilms as generated by microorganisms and tissue reaction associated with medical implants.