13 September2023
By
CLARE WATSON
Scientists Engineer E. Coli Bacteria
to Generate Electricity
Rod-shaped E. coli (Steve Gschmeissner/Science
Photo Library/Getty Images)
Ever since 1911, when British mycologist Michael
Cressé Potter noticed that brewer's yeast generated electricity,
scientists have been trying to harness the power of microbial fuel
cells.
But the efficiencies of tiny, budding 'bioreactors' have
been too low for practical use. What's more, it turns out microbes can
be surprisingly picky in what substrates they digest to create
electricity.
Now, a team of researchers from the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) has engineered one of the most
common species of bacteria, Escherichia coli, to generate electricity
from brewery wastewater – and it has surpassed the most recent
bioengineered strains.
"Though there are exotic microbes that naturally produce
electricity, they can only do so in the presence of specific
chemicals," explains senior author and chemical engineer Ardemis
Boghossian, from EPFL.
"E. coli can grow on a wide range of sources, which
allowed us to produce electricity in a wide range of environments,
including from wastewater."
To enhance E. coli's ability to generate electricity,
the researchers modified its genome to include instructions for
protein complexes found in Shewanella oneidensis, one of the
best-known bacterial electricity generators.
S. oneidensis produces a flow of electrons when it
reduces metals, an electrical signal that has been used, for example,
to detect toxic metals such as arsenic in prototype systems.
By incorporating all components of S. oneidensis'
electricity-generating pathway in E. coli, Mohammed Mouhib, the
study's lead author, Boghossian and colleagues ramped up its
electroactivity two-fold compared to previously engineered strains
(which only included part of the S. oneidensis pathway).
However, those experiments were done in a single chamber
under lab conditions. The real test for any potential technology is
whether it can work in industrial settings.
Past research has explored using algae in brewery
wastewater treatment. Breweries need to process the water they use to
wash grains and flush out tanks before disposing of it because it
contains a heady mix of sugars, starches, alcohols, and yeast that
could trigger unwelcome microbial blooms if discharged untreated.
So the team tested their E. coli system on a sample of
wastewater collected from a local brewery in Lausanne, Switzerland,
which the modified bacteria happily gobbled up over 50 hours.
"Our bioengineered electric bacteria were able to
flourish exponentially by feeding off this waste," says Boghossian,
whereas S. oneidensis, used as a comparator, wasn't able to digest the
mixed effluent.
This makes the engineered E. coli far more suitable for
treating industrial wastewater, even if its electricity-generating
potential is still slower than S. oneidensis, the researchers say.
E. coli's appetite for different chemical substrates
also means the engineered bacteria could possibly be adapted to other
waste streams and feedstocks.
In any case, the researchers will need to test whether
their modified E. coli can process industrial volumes. If so, it could
bring about some considerable energy savings.
"Instead of putting energy into the system to process
organic waste, we are producing electricity while processing organic
waste at the same time – hitting two birds with one stone," says
Boghossian.
The study has been published in
Joule.
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