Efficient long-range conduction in cable bacteria through nickel protein wires.
Henricus T S BoschkerPerran L M CookLubos PolereckyRaghavendran Thiruvallur EachambadiHelena LozanoSilvia Hidalgo-MartinezDmitry KhalenkowValentina SpampinatoNathalie ClaesParomita KunduDa WangDries van ThourhoutKarina K SandFrancesca CavezzaTom HauffmanJesper Tataru BjergAndré G SkirtachKamila KochanMerrilyn McKeeBayden R WoodDiana E BedollaAlessandra GianoncelliNicole M J GeerlingsNani Van GervenHan RemautJeanine S GeelhoedRuben Millan-SolsonaLaura FumagalliLars Peter NielsenAlexis FranquetJean V MancaGabriel GomilaFilip J R MeysmanPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Filamentous cable bacteria display long-range electron transport, generating electrical currents over centimeter distances through a highly ordered network of fibers embedded in their cell envelope. The conductivity of these periplasmic wires is exceptionally high for a biological material, but their chemical structure and underlying electron transport mechanism remain unresolved. Here, we combine high-resolution microscopy, spectroscopy, and chemical imaging on individual cable bacterium filaments to demonstrate that the periplasmic wires consist of a conductive protein core surrounded by an insulating protein shell layer. The core proteins contain a sulfur-ligated nickel cofactor, and conductivity decreases when nickel is oxidized or selectively removed. The involvement of nickel as the active metal in biological conduction is remarkable, and suggests a hitherto unknown form of electron transport that enables efficient conduction in centimeter-long protein structures.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- reduced graphene oxide
- protein protein
- amino acid
- binding protein
- mass spectrometry
- oxide nanoparticles
- metal organic framework
- high speed
- small molecule
- gold nanoparticles
- high throughput
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- optical coherence tomography
- photodynamic therapy
- tandem mass spectrometry
- fluorescence imaging