Imaginary admittance and charge transfer resistance correlate to the physiological status of Shewanella oneidensis cultures in real time

[Display omitted] •Admittance values vary as a function of growth status.•Charge transfer resistance increases as a function of a diminishing energy source.•Charge transfer resistance reflects the metabolic status of microbial cultures.•In-situ EIS offers potential to monitor real time microbial phy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioelectrochemistry (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2022-10, Vol.147, p.108210-108210, Article 108210
Hauptverfasser: Teel, Hunter R., Likit-anurak, K., Shimpalee, Sirivatch, Turick, Charles E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Admittance values vary as a function of growth status.•Charge transfer resistance increases as a function of a diminishing energy source.•Charge transfer resistance reflects the metabolic status of microbial cultures.•In-situ EIS offers potential to monitor real time microbial physiological status. Monitoring microbial activity is essential for industrial and environmental applications to proceed efficiently. To minimize time and labor-intensive monitoring, a new paradigm is required for in-situ, real time analysis. Since bioconversion of organics is accomplished by microorganisms through the oxidation of feedstocks linked to the reduction of electron acceptors, microorganisms can be viewed as electrochemical catalysts. In this respect, cell membranes have an electrical potential, which is analogous to a conventional capacitor and linked dynamically to cellular activity. Here we demonstrate the use of electrochemical impedance spectrometry (EIS) and cyclic voltammetry (CV) for monitoring microbial metabolic activity in real time, in-situ. The effect of organic electron donors as a function of concentration to the physiological status of strains of Shewanella oneidensis was determined. In this study, the pyomelanin overproducer (S. oneidensis ΔhmgA) and the pyomelanin deficient mutant (S. oneidensis ΔmelA) were chosen due to different surface electrochemical characteristics along with differences in oxygen utilization efficiency. CV, relative admittance, phase shift and permittivity changed with growth status and correlated with electron flow from organic carbon sources and terminal electron acceptor availability. This work offers a novel and inexpensive approach to real time monitoring with the advantage of abundant data.
ISSN:1567-5394
1878-562X
DOI:10.1016/j.bioelechem.2022.108210