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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2004, p. 1234-1237, Vol. 70, No. 2
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.2.1234-1237.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Electron Transfer by Desulfobulbus propionicus to Fe(III) and Graphite Electrodes
Dawn E. Holmes, Daniel R. Bond, and Derek R. Lovley*
Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Received 10 July 2003/
Accepted 13 October 2003

ABSTRACT
Desulfobulbus propionicus was able to grow with Fe(III), the
humic acids analog anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), or
a graphite electrode as an electron acceptor. These results
provide an explanation for the enrichment of
Desulfobulbaceae species on the surface of electrodes harvesting electricity
from anaerobic marine sediments and further expand the diversity
of microorganisms known to have the ability to use both sulfate
and Fe(III) as an electron acceptor.

INTRODUCTION
Electrical energy can be harvested from marine sediments when
a graphite electrode emplaced in marine sediment (anode) is
connected by an electrical circuit to another electrode (cathode)
in overlying aerobic water (
22). Microbial activity in the sediments
is required for current production (
2,
8,
25,
28), and there
is a specific enrichment of

-
Proteobacteria on the anode surface
(
2,
8,
28).
In most freshwater and marine sediment fuel cells, microorganisms in the Geobacteraceae family are the predominant microorganisms on the anodes (2, 8, 28). However, in all marine sediment fuel cells evaluated, another group of
-proteobacterial sequences, most closely related to sulfate-reducing bacteria from the family Desulfobulbaceae, was also consistently enriched on the anode (8, 28). In fact, in one field deployment, organisms in this cluster accounted for all of the
-proteobacterial sequences and ca. 62% of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences recovered from the current-harvesting anode (8).
In order to investigate how Desulfobulbaceae might interact with anodes in sediments, studies were conducted with Desulfobulbus propionicus. Dissimilatory sulfate reduction via the incomplete oxidation of organic acids such as lactate, propionate, butyrate, and ethanol to acetate is considered the primary metabolism of D. propionicus (29, 30). However, D. propionicus can oxidize organic electron donors with nitrate (5, 30), nitrite (5), or oxygen (5, 6) and can oxidize inorganic sulfur compounds with the reduction of O2 (5, 7), nitrite (5), nitrate (5), or Mn(IV) (16). Furthermore, in the absence of an electron acceptor, D. propionicus can ferment lactate, pyruvate, or ethanol to a mixture of acetate and propionate via the succinate-propionate pathway (26, 29, 30).
Previous studies also demonstrated that cell suspensions of D. propionicus reduced Fe(III)-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA; 10 mM) and poorly crystalline Fe(III)-oxide (100 mM) when propionate (5 to 10 mM) was provided as the electron donor (22). However, Fe(III) did not support growth in those studies. The ability to grow via reduction of Fe(III) oxides may have relevance to growth on electricity-harvesting electrodes in sediments, because both electrodes and Fe(III) oxides represent insoluble, extracellular electron acceptors.

Dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction.
The representative
Desulfobulbaceae species,
D. propionicus (DSMZ 2032), was obtained from DSMZ (German Collection of Microorganisms
and Cell Cultures; Braunschweig, Germany) and was grown in a
slightly modified version of NB Basal medium (
14), which contained
the following (per liter): 0.42 g of KH
2PO
4, 0.22 g of K
2HPO
4,
0.2 g of NH
4Cl, 0.38 g of KCl, 0.36 g of NaCl, 0.75 g of CaCl
2 · 2 H
2O, 0.10 g of MgCl
2, 1.8 g of NaHCO
3, and 0.5 g
of Na
2CO
3, as well as 1 µM Na
2SeO
4 and trace minerals
and vitamins. This medium differed from that typically used
to culture
D. propionicus (DSMZ medium 194) in that it contained
selenium and fivefold more calcium. Sulfate other than that
present in the trace metal solution (300 µM) was omitted
to prevent extensive sulfide production with subsequent abiotic
reduction of Fe(III). Strict anaerobic techniques were used
throughout, and cultures were incubated at 30°C in the dark.
Organic acids (
21), cell numbers (
19), Fe(II), and total iron
(
19,
20) were monitored as previously described. Growth with
various electron donors and acceptors was considered positive
only after six consecutive transfers.
When D. propionicus was grown on pyruvate alone, 6.67 ± 0.33 mM (n = 3) pyruvate was fermented to 4.22 ± 0.51 mM acetate and 2.23 ± 0.35 mM propionate according to the following reaction: 3CH3COCOO- + 3H2O
2CH3COO- + CH3CH2COO- + 2HCO3- + 2H+.
These results are similar to those of previous studies that have shown that acetate and propionate are formed in a 2:1 ratio when Desulfobulbus propionicus is grown on pyruvate in the absence of an electron acceptor (26).
Pyruvate consumption by D. propionicus differed significantly from fermentation when a soluble form of iron was provided as an electron acceptor. For example, when pyruvate (mean ± standard deviation, 19.20 ± 0.68 mM; n = 3) was provided as the electron donor with Fe(III)-citrate (50 mM) as the electron acceptor, Fe(III) was reduced and 18.65 ± 0.36 mM acetate was formed, accompanied by cell growth (Fig. 1a). The stoichiometry of pyruvate consumption and Fe(III) reduction was consistent with the following reaction: CH3COCOO- + 2Fe3+ + 2H2O
CH3COO- + HCO3- + 2Fe2+ + 3H+.
D. propionicus was able to grow with several other soluble electron
acceptors, including Fe(III)-NTA (5 mM), Fe(III)-pyrophosphate
(10 mM), and anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS; 5 mM), with
pyruvate as the electron donor. Propionate, lactate, and hydrogen
also served as electron donors for growth on all forms of soluble
Fe(III) evaluated as well as AQDS. The mechanism(s) for Fe(III)
reduction appeared to be independent of the mechanism(s) for
sulfate reduction, because
D. propionicus continued to reduce
Fe(III)-citrate in the presence of 1 to 10 mM molybdate, an
inhibitor of sulfate reduction.
There was a mixture of pyruvate fermentation and Fe(III) reduction when poorly crystalline Fe(III)-oxide (100 mM) (17) was provided as the electron acceptor with pyruvate (7.15 mM) as the electron donor. In the presence of Fe(III)-oxide approximately twice as much acetate was formed from pyruvate oxidation than would be expected from pyruvate fermentation alone; 6.87 ± 0.75 mM (n = 3) of Fe(III)-oxide was reduced, and 5.13 ± 0.36 mM acetate and 1.84 ± 0.25 mM propionate accumulated (Fig. 1c). In addition, Fe(III)-oxide reduction during pyruvate metabolism appeared to yield energy to support cell growth, as the final cell numbers in cultures grown in the presence of Fe(III)-oxide, 1.0 x 108 ± 1.53 x 107 cells/ml (starting cell number was 1.20 x 106 ± 2.32 x 105; n = 3), were significantly higher than those in cultures grown with pyruvate alone (3.72 x 107 ± 2.5 x 106 cells/ml of culture; starting cell number was 2.43 x 106 ± 6.35 x 105; n = 3). The stoichiometry of this mixed reaction was consistent with the following reaction: 3.4CH3COCOO- + 6.8Fe3+ + 6.8H2O
3.4CH3COO- + 3.4HCO3- + 6.8Fe2+ and 3.75CH3COCOO- + 3.75H2O
2.5CH3COO- + 1.25CH3CH2COO- + 2.5HCO3- + 2.5H+ for a combined reaction of 7.15CH3COCOO- + 6.8Fe3+ + 10.55H2O
5.9CH3COO- + 5.9HCO3- + 6.8Fe2+ +1.25CH3CH2COO- + 12.7H+.
D. propionicus could also be continually cultured with hydrogen as the electron donor and poorly crystalline Fe(III)-oxide as the electron acceptor when acetate (0.1 mM) was provided as a carbon source (Fig. 1b).

Electron transfer to a graphite electrode.
In order to evaluate the ability of
D. propionicus to transfer
electrons to an electrode, the inoculum was grown fermentatively
on lactate (10 mM). The cells were pelleted via centrifugation,
washed, and then resuspended in 20 ml of fresh anoxic medium
lacking electron donor or acceptor. Ten milliliters of this
cell suspension was inoculated into the anaerobic anodic chamber
(250 ml of medium) of a two-chambered electrode system, constructed
as previously described (
2,
3). The electrodes were (in centimeters)
2.34 by 7.02 by 1.17 sticks of unpolished graphite (grade G10;
Graphite Engineering and Sales, Greenville, Mich.). The anode
was poised with a potentiostat (AMEL instruments, Milan, Italy)
at a constant potential of +0.52 V in reference to a standard
H
2 electrode, which preliminary studies demonstrated was the
optimal potential to support growth.
D. propionicus was able
to use the electrode surface as an electron acceptor when pyruvate
(2.42 mM) (Fig.
2), lactate (1 mM) (Fig.
3), propionate (2 mM)
(data not shown), or hydrogen (data not shown) was provided
as electron donor. Almost identical current profiles were observed
when lactate (Fig.
3) or propionate (data not shown) was provided
as electron donor; current rose rapidly and then declined as
lactate or propionate was depleted. Maximum current production
with lactate and propionate reached 28.35 ± 4.72 mA/m
2 (mean ± standard deviations;
n = 3) and 26.77 ±
7.87 mA/m
2, respectively, and between 21 to 27% of the electrons
available from the incomplete oxidation of lactate and propionate
were transferred to the electrode. Current produced with pyruvate
and hydrogen was significantly lower: only 8.27 ± 1.97
mA/m
2 from pyruvate (Fig.
2) and 5.91 ± 1.18 mA/m
2 of
current from hydrogen (data not shown). Similar to Fe(III) reduction,
the addition of molybdate (5 mM) to cultures grown in the anodic
chamber with lactate (2 mM) did not have a significant effect
on current production (data not shown).
Evaluation of end products and electron recovery from pyruvate
oxidation suggests that electron transfer to an insoluble graphite
electrode can be attributed to the same mixed metabolism as
observed with insoluble Fe(III)-oxide. For example, when
D. propionicus was grown in the electrode chamber with 2.42 ±
0.23 mM pyruvate provided as the electron donor with a poised
electrode as the sole electron acceptor, 1.79 ± 0.33
mM acetate and 0.64 ± 0.29 mM propionate was formed.
Thus, 26.4% of the pyruvate metabolized was associated with
oxidation of pyruvate to acetate coupled to electron transfer
to the electrode.
When spent medium from a lactate-grown culture was replaced with fresh medium containing more lactate (1 mM), current production immediately resumed (Fig. 3). This suggested that, as was previously seen with Geobacter sulfurreducens (3) and Rhodoferax ferrireducens (4), cells of D. propionicus attached to the electrode, rather than planktonic cells, were primarily responsible for the current production.
When S0 (20 g/liter) was added as a potential electron donor for electron transfer to the electrode, sulfate was produced in the presence of D. propionicus but not in the absence of cells (Fig. 4). Cells did not produce sulfate in the absence of the electrode.

Implications.
The ability of
D. propionicus to transfer electrons to Fe(III),
AQDS, and electrodes has implications for anaerobic respiration
in sedimentary environments. Only one other organism, the gram-positive
bacterium
Desulfotomaculum reducens, has been reported to grow
with both sulfate and Fe(III) as terminal electron acceptors
(
27).
D. propionicus is the first sulfate-reducing organism
found to conserve energy to support growth from the reduction
of insoluble Fe(III)-oxide, the most abundant form of microbially
reducible Fe(III) in most sedimentary environments (
12). Microorganisms
that can use both sulfate and Fe(III) as electron acceptors
may be most competitive at the interface between the zones of
Fe(III) reduction and sulfate reduction in aquatic sediments
where Fe(III) is still available but is not in sufficient concentrations
to inhibit sulfate reduction (
15,
18).
The ability of D. propionicus to use a graphite electrode as an electron acceptor provides an explanation for the consistent enrichment of closely related organisms in the family Desulfobulbaceae on electrodes harvesting electricity from marine sediments. As previously observed with such dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms as species within the family Geobacteraceae (2, 3), Shewanella putrefaciens (9, 10), Clostridium butyricum (23), Rhodoferax ferrireducens (4), Aeromonas hydrophila (24), and Geothrix fermentans (D. R. Bond and D. R. Lovley, unpublished data). D. propionicus did not require the addition of exogenous electron-shuttling compounds for electricity production.
In addition, the finding that D. propionicus is able to oxidize elemental S0 with an electrode serving as the electron acceptor provides further insight into the biological mechanisms involved in current production by the marine sediment fuel cell. It has previously been shown that when Mn(IV) oxides are added to anoxic marine sediments containing sulfides, there is a production of sulfate that requires biological activity (1, 11). Mn(IV) is able to chemically oxidize sulfides to S0, which is then oxidized by microorganisms to sulfate with the reduction of Mn(IV). When a current-harvesting electrode is placed in anoxic sediments, similar processes are observed. Elemental S0 is known to precipitate on the anodes of marine sediment fuel cells as the result of abiotic sulfide oxidation at the anode surface (28), and elevated sulfate levels have been measured in sediments closest to the current-harvesting anode (28). These geochemical results coupled with the fact that S0 oxidation with an electrode serving as the electron acceptor was observed in pure-culture studies of D. propionicus suggests that the oxidation of elemental sulfur on the anode surface may be an important biological process in the marine sediment fuel cell.
However, the results also suggest that Desulfobulbaceae species are unlikely to play an important role in coupling the oxidation of organic matter to the reduction of the electrode in marine sediment fuel cells. Desulfobulbaceae are not known to oxidize acetate, which is likely to be the primary electron donor for electricity production. Rather, D. propionicus can only metabolize such organic acids as propionate, lactate, and pyruvate, which are less likely to be important extracellular intermediates in sediments (13). Furthermore, electron transfer to the electrode from the mixed metabolism of organic acids by D. propionicus is relatively inefficient; only ca. 25% of the electrons available from the incomplete oxidation of pyruvate, lactate, and propionate were transferred to the electrode surface. In contrast, several Geobacteraceae species can oxidize acetate and are able to quantitatively transfer all of the electrons available from the complete oxidation of organic acids to CO2 to an electrode (2, 3). Therefore, the consistent enrichment of Desulfobulbaceae 16S rRNA gene sequences on current-harvesting marine anodes (2, 8, 28) is probably due to their ability to oxidize S0 on the electrode surface.
In summary, this study provides the first example of a sulfate-reducing organism that can also conserve energy to support growth via electron transfer to insoluble electron acceptors, such as Fe(III) oxide and electrodes. Further studies are warranted to determine whether the mechanisms involved in electron transfer by D. propionicus to these extracellular electron acceptors are similar to those in more well-studied Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, 106N Morril IV N, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003. Phone: (413) 545-9651. Fax: (413) 545-1578. E-mail:
dlovley{at}microbio.umass.edu.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2004, p. 1234-1237, Vol. 70, No. 2
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.2.1234-1237.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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