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Extracellular redox-active compounds, flavins and other quinones, have been hypothesized to play a major role in the delivery of electrons from cellular metabolic systems to extracellular insoluble substrates by a diffusion-based shuttling two-electron-transfer mechanism. Here we show that flavin molecules secreted by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 enhance the ability of its outer-membrane c-type cytochromes (OM c-Cyts) to transport electrons as redox cofactors, but not free-form flavins. Whole-cell differential pulse voltammetry revealed that the redox potential of flavin was reversibly shifted more than 100 mV in a positive direction, in good agreement with increasing microbial current generation. Importantly, this flavin/OM c-Cyts interaction was found to facilitate a one-electron redox reaction via a semiquinone, resulting in a 10(3)- to 10(5)-fold faster reaction rate than that of free flavin. These results are not consistent with previously proposed redox-shuttling mechanisms but suggest that the flavin/OM c-Cyts interaction regulates the extent of extracellular electron transport coupled with intracellular metabolic activity.
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Okamoto et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dccf01d111c0385b3592c8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1220823110
Akihiro Okamoto
National Institute for Materials Science
Kazuhito Hashimoto
Meidensha (Japan)
Kenneth H. Nealson
University of Notre Dame
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
University of Southern California
The University of Tokyo
Japan Science and Technology Agency
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