Integrated Proteomics and Metabolomics Reveal Altered Metabolic Regulation of Xanthobacter autotrophicus under Electrochemical Water-Splitting Conditions

Biological–inorganic hybrid systems are a growing class of technologies that combine microorganisms with materials for a variety of purposes, including chemical synthesis, environmental remediation, and energy generation. These systems typically consider microorganisms as simple catalysts for the re...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2024-08, Vol.16 (31), p.40973-40979
Hauptverfasser: Schuman, Zachary, Xie, Yongchao, O’Keeffe, Samantha, Guan, Xun, Sha, Jihui, Sun, Jingwen, Wohlschlegel, James A., Park, Junyoung O., Liu, Chong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Biological–inorganic hybrid systems are a growing class of technologies that combine microorganisms with materials for a variety of purposes, including chemical synthesis, environmental remediation, and energy generation. These systems typically consider microorganisms as simple catalysts for the reaction of interest; however, other metabolic activity is likely to have a large influence on the system performance. The investigation of biological responses to the hybrid environment is thus critical to the future development and optimization. The present study investigates this phenomenon in a recently reported hybrid system that uses electrochemical water splitting to provide reducing equivalents to the nitrogen-fixing bacteria Xanthobacter autotrophicus for efficient reduction of N2 to biomass that may be used as fertilizer. Using integrated proteomic and metabolomic methods, we find a pattern of differentiated metabolic regulation under electrochemical water-splitting (hybrid) conditions with an increase in carbon fixation products glycerate-3-phosphate and acetyl-CoA that suggests a high energy availability. We further report an increased expression of proteins of interest, namely, those responsible for nitrogen fixation and assimilation, which indicate increased rates of nitrogen fixation and support previous observations of faster biomass accumulation in the hybrid system compared to typical planktonic growth conditions. This work complicates the inert catalyst view of biological–inorganic hybrids while demonstrating the power of multiomics analysis as a tool for deeper understanding of those systems.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.4c07363