The unique extracellular electron transfer (EET) ability has positioned electroactive bacteria (EAB) as a major class of cellular chassis for genetic engineering aimed at favorable environmental, energy, and geoscience applications. However, previous efforts to genetically enhance EET ability have often impaired the basal metabolism and cellular growth due to the competition for the limited cellular resource. Here, we design a quorum sensing-based population-state decision (PSD) system for intelligently reprogramming the EET regulation system, which allows the rebalanced allocation of the cellular resource upon the bacterial growth state. We demonstrate that the electron output from Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 could be greatly enhanced by the PSD system via shifting the dominant metabolic flux from initial bacterial growth to subsequent EET enhancement (i.e., after reaching a certain population-state threshold). The strain engineered with this system achieved up to 4.8-fold EET enhancement and exhibited a substantially improved pollutant reduction ability, increasing the reduction efficiencies of methyl orange and hexavalent chromium by 18.8- and 5.5-fold, respectively. Moreover, the PSD system outcompeted the constant expression system in managing EET enhancement, resulting in considerably enhanced electron output and pollutant bioreduction capability. The PSD system provides a powerful tool for intelligently managing extracellular electron transfer and may inspire the development of new-generation smart bioelectrical devices for various applications.
Pursuing efficient approaches to promote the extracellular electron transfer (EET) of extracellular respiratory bacteria is essential to their application in environmental remediation and waste treatment. Here, we report a new strategy of tuning electron flux by clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)-ddAsCpf1-based rediverting (namely STAR) to enhance the EET capacity of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, a model extracellular respiratory bacterium widely present in the environment. The developed CRISPR-ddAsCpf1 system enabled approximately 100% gene repression with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a reporter. Using a WO 3 probe, 10 representative genes encoding for putative competitive electron transfer proteins were screened, among which 7 genes were identified as valid targets for EET enhancement. Repressing the valid genes not only increased the transcription level of the L-lactate metabolism genes but also affected the genes involved in direct and indirect EET. Increased riboflavin production was also observed. The feasibility of this strategy to enhance the bioreduction of methyl orange, an organic pollutant, and chromium, a typical heavy metal, was demonstrated. This work implies a great potential of the STAR strategy with the CIRPSR-ddAsCpf1 system for enhancing bacterial EET to favor more efficient environmental remediation applications.
Dissimilatory metal-reducing bacteria (DMRB) with extracellular electron transfer (EET) capability show great potential in bioremediating the subsurface environments contaminated by uranium through bioreduction and precipitation of hexavalent uranium [U(VI)]. However, the low EET efficiency of DMRB remains a bottleneck for their applications. Herein, we develop an engineered CRISPR platform to drive the extracellular electron pumping of Shewanella oneidensis, a representative DMRB species widely present in aquatic environments. The CRISPR platform allows for highly efficient and multiplex genome editing and rapid platform elimination post-editing in S. oneidensis. Enabled by such a platform, a genomic promoter engineering strategy (GPS) for genome-widely engineering the EET-encoding gene network was established. The production of electron conductive Mtr complex, synthesis of electron shuttle flavin, and generation of NADH as intracellular electron carrier are globally optimized and promoted, leading to a significantly enhanced EET ability. Applied to U(VI) bioreduction, the edited strains achieve up to 3.62-fold higher reduction capacity over the control. Our work endows DMRB with an enhanced ability to remediate the radionuclides-contaminated environments and provides a gene editing approach to handle the growing environmental challenges of radionuclide contaminations.
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