4.8 Article

Microbial Interactions in Electroactive Biofilms for Environmental Engineering Applications: A Role for Nonexoelectrogens

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 22, Pages 15273-15279

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c04368

Keywords

Microbial electrochemical systems; electroactive bacteria; biofilms; microbial interactions; conjugative plasmids

Funding

  1. Carlsberg Foundation, Denmark
  2. 2022 James J. Morgan Early Career Award
  3. [CF18-0084]

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Microbial electrochemical systems have gained attention for their various environmental engineering applications. The focus has been on electroactive bacteria, but understanding the contribution of other inhabitants in the biofilm is crucial for improving the systems.
Microbial electrochemical systems have gained much attention over the past decade due to their potential for various environmental engineering applications ranging from energy production to wastewater treatment to bioproduction. At the heart of these systems lie exoelectrogens-microorganisms capable of exporting electrons generated during metabolism to external electron acceptors such as electrodes. The bacterial biofilm communities on these electrodes are dominated by exoelectrogens but are nonetheless extremely diverse. So far, within the field, the main focus has been on the electroactive bacteria. However, to broaden our understanding of these communities, it is crucial to clarify how the remaining inhabitants of electrode-respiring biofilms contribute to the overall function of the biofilm. Ultimately, such insights may enable improvement of microbial electrochemical systems by reshaping the community structure with naturally occurring beneficial strains.

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