4.4 Review

Protein Nanowires: the Electrification of the Microbial World and Maybe Our Own

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 202, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00331-20

Keywords

Geobacter; Syntrophus; cable bacteria; e-biologics; electromicrobiology; nanowire; syntrophy

Categories

Funding

  1. College of Natural Sciences, UMass-Amherst
  2. UMASS Manning/Institute for Applied Life Sciences Award
  3. National Science Foundation grant through the DMREF program [NSF CMMI-1921839]

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Electrically conductive protein nanowires appear to be widespread in the microbial world and are a revolutionary green material for the fabrication of electronic devices. Electrically conductive pili (e-pili) assembled from type IV pilin monomers have independently evolved multiple times in microbial history as have electrically conductive archaella (e-archaella) assembled from homologous archaellin monomers. A role for e-pili in long-range (micrometer) extracellular electron transport has been demonstrated in some microbes. The surprising finding of e-pili in syntrophic bacteria and the role of e-pili as conduits for direct interspecies electron transfer have necessitated a reassessment of routes for electron flux in important methanogenic environments, such as anaerobic digesters and terrestrial wetlands. Pilin monomers similar to those found in e-pili may also be a major building block of the conductive cables that transport electrons over centimeter distances through continuous filaments of cable bacteria consisting of a thousand cells or more. Protein nanowires harvested from microbes have many functional and sustainability advantages over traditional nanowire materials and have already yielded novel electronic devices for sustainable electricity production, neuromorphic memory, and sensing. e-pili can be mass produced with an Escherichia coli chassis, providing a ready source of material for electronics as well as for studies on the basic mechanisms for long-range electron transport along protein nanowires. Continued exploration is required to better understand the electrification of microbial communities with microbial nanowires and to expand the green toolbox of sustainable materials for wiring and powering the emerging Internet of things.

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