Enhanced Bioreduction of Radionuclides by Driving Microbial Extracellular Electron Pumping with an Engineered CRISPR Platform.
Yang-Yang FanQiang TangFeng-He LiHong SunDi MinJing-Hang WuYang LiWen-Wei LiHan-Qing YuPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2021)
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.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- electron transfer
- high throughput
- highly efficient
- genome wide
- solar cells
- dna methylation
- heavy metals
- copy number
- electron microscopy
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- microbial community
- drinking water
- human health
- escherichia coli
- climate change
- single cell
- transcription factor
- genome wide identification