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Journal of Bacteriology, December 1999, p. 7647-7649, Vol. 181, No. 24
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Periplasmic 9.6-Kilodalton c-Type
Cytochrome of Geobacter sulfurreducens Is Not an Electron
Shuttle to Fe(III)
Jon R.
Lloyd,
Elizabeth L.
Blunt-Harris, and
Derek R.
Lovley*
Department of Microbiology, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Received 12 August 1999/Accepted 30 September 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Geobacter sulfurreducens contains a 9.6-kDa
c-type cytochrome that was previously proposed to serve as
an extracellular electron shuttle to insoluble Fe(III) oxides. However,
when the cytochrome was added to washed-cell suspensions of G. sulfurreducens it did not enhance Fe(III) oxide reduction,
whereas similar concentrations of the known electron shuttle,
anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate, greatly stimulated Fe(III) oxide
reduction. Furthermore, analysis of the extracellular
c-type cytochromes in cultures of G. sulfurreducens demonstrated that the dominant c-type
cytochrome was not the 9.6-kDa cytochrome, but rather a 41-kDa
cytochrome. These results and other considerations suggest that the
9.6-kDa cytochrome is not an important extracellular electron shuttle
to Fe(III) oxides.
 |
TEXT |
The mechanisms for Fe(III) oxide
reduction by dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms are of
interest because of the environmental and potential evolutionary
significance of this type of respiration. Microbial reduction of
Fe(III) to Fe(II) in aquatic sediments and aquifers impacts on the
inorganic geochemistry of these systems and may also play an important
role in the oxidation of natural and organic contaminants (9, 10,
12). Furthermore, microbiological and geological evidence
suggests that dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction may have been one of the
earliest forms of microbial respiration (25).
It has generally been considered that Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms
must establish direct contact with insoluble Fe(III) oxides in order to
reduce them (9, 10, 12). In soils and sediments, the need
for direct contact can be alleviated by the presence of Fe(III)
chelators or humic substances (humics) and other extracellular
quinones. Solubilization of Fe(III) by Fe(III) chelators can greatly
accelerate reduction of Fe(III) in aquifers (16, 17).
Soluble humics and other extracellular quinones can accelerate Fe(III)
oxide reduction because Fe(III) reducers can transfer electrons to the
quinone moieties in humics and other compounds, and then the
hydroquionones can abiotically transfer electrons to Fe(III) oxides
with the regeneration of the quinone (11, 13, 22). Through
such electron shuttling, low concentrations of extracellular quinones
can greatly stimulate Fe(III) oxide reduction in soils (20).
Recently, it has been proposed that the dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing
microorganism, Geobacter sulfurreducens, releases a 9.6-kDa
c-type cytochrome into the external environment which serves
as an electron shuttle to promote reduction of insoluble Fe(III) oxides
(23). If true, this would have an important impact on the
understanding of Fe(III) reduction in sedimentary environments because
both culturing and culture-independent studies of 16S ribosomal DNA
sequences have indicated that Geobacter species are
numerically significant organisms in the Fe(III) reduction zones of
aquatic sediments and the subsurface (1, 3, 4, 21, 26).
Previous studies have demonstrated that Geobacter species
contain c-type cytochromes that have been implicated in
electron transport to Fe(III) (2, 6, 14, 18, 19). These
include a small soluble c-type cytochrome in Geobacter
metallireducens (2a). In those previous studies, it was
considered that the c-type cytochromes were involved in
Fe(III) reduction at or near the cell surface. Thus, the suggestion
that G. sulfurreducens might release an extracellular
c-type cytochrome to promote Fe(III) reduction is novel.
However, the hypothesis that the 9.6-kDa c-type cytochrome
in G. sulfurreducens can serve as an extracellular electron
shuttle to Fe(III) oxide was based on indirect evidence. For example, it was shown that the 9.6-kDa cytochrome that had been purified from
cells (not from the external medium) could be oxidized with Fe(III)
oxide, but no studies on the potential for the cytochrome to act as an
external electron shuttle between G. sulfurreducens and
Fe(III) oxides were conducted. Furthermore, although it was shown that
culture supernatants had absorbance spectra consistent with the
presence of c-type cytochromes, no data that directly demonstrated that this absorbance spectra were due to the presence of
the 9.6-kDa cytochrome in the supernatant were presented. Since Geobacter species produce multiple c-type
cytochromes (6, 14, 18), any of which could potentially
account for the absorbance spectra observed in the supernatants, such
data are crucial to support the electron-shuttling hypothesis.
Here we report that, in fact, the 9.6-kDa cytochrome is not an
effective electron shuttle between G. sulfurreducens and
Fe(III) oxide. Furthermore, under optimum culturing conditions for this organism, there was little, if any, release of the 9.6-kDa cytochrome into the extracellular medium. These results strongly suggest that
G. sulfurreducens does not use the 9.6-kDa cytochrome as an
electron shuttle for Fe(III) oxide reduction.
Fe(III) oxide reduction is not stimulated by the 9.6-kDa
cytochrome.
G. sulfurreducens (ATCC 51573), as used in the
previous study of Seeliger and coworkers (23), was obtained
from our laboratory culture collection. In order to purify the 9.6-kDa
c-type cytochrome, cells were grown in 10-liter glass
carboys with acetate (20 mM) as the electron donor and fumarate (40 mM)
as the electron acceptor, as previously described (18).
Cells were harvested in late exponential phase by centrifugation and
then resuspended for 45 min at 37°C in 50 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.0)
containing lysozyme (0.1 mg ml
1), DNase (40 U
ml
1), and glycerol (10% [vol/vol]). Cells were broken
in a French press at 12,500 lb/in2 (two passages). Cell
debris was removed by centrifugation (5,000 × g; 20 min) and the supernatant was centrifuged (100,000 × g; 1 h). The 9.6-kDa protein was purified from this supernatant by fast protein liquid chromatography with gel filtration (Sephacryl) and
cation exchange (SP-Sepharose) columns. The 9.6-kDa c-type cytochrome was about 90% pure (as determined by gel electrophoresis in
combination with image analysis) after sequential passage of the
soluble fraction over these two columns and was active against Fe(III)
(23); spectrophotometric analysis confirmed that it was
reduced rapidly by dithionite and oxidized by Fe(III) citrate. The
protein was also localized to a periplasmic fraction prepared by
osmotic shock, further identifying it as the periplasmic protein described by Seeliger and coworkers (23).
In order to determine whether the 9.6-kDa cytochrome could serve as an
electron shuttle between G. sulfurreducens and Fe(III) oxide, washed-cell suspensions of G. sulfurreducens were
prepared and resuspended in anaerobic bicarbonate buffer (30 mM; pH
6.7) containing acetate (10 mM) as an electron donor and amorphous Fe(III) oxide (10 mM) as the electron acceptor, as previously described
for studies with the closely related G. metallireducens (11). Fe(II) was measured with a Ferrozine-based
colorimetric assay (15) and results presented are the means
of three incubations for each treatment. The cell protein concentration
was 0.12 mg of protein ml
1.
As has previously been reported for G. metallireducens
(11, 13, 16), washed-cell suspensions of G. sulfurreducens only slowly reduced Fe(III) oxide (Fig.
1). This is consistent with the
relatively slow growth of these organisms with insoluble Fe(III) oxide
as the electron acceptor. The addition of a 200 nM final concentration
of the 9.6-kDa cytochrome did not stimulate Fe(III) reduction (Fig. 1).
This cytochrome concentration is ca. twofold higher than the highest
concentration that Seeliger and coworkers estimated was released in
cultures of G. sulfurreducens (23). In contrast,
a 200 nM concentration of the humic analog
anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) stimulated Fe(III) reduction
10-fold. AQDS has previously been shown to serve as an external
electron shuttle to promote Fe(III) oxide reduction by all
Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms that have been evaluated (11,
13). Even increasing the concentration of the cytochrome to 2 µM (20-fold higher than that expected in culture supernatants) had no
significant effect on Fe(III) reduction, whereas the same concentration
of AQDS stimulated the rate of Fe(III) reduction 60-fold (Fig. 1).
These results demonstrate that the 9.6-kDa cytochrome of G. sulfurreducens is not an effective electron shuttle between
G. sulfurreducens and Fe(III) oxides.

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FIG. 1.
Fe(III) oxide reduction by cell suspensions of G. sulfurreducens in the presence of 200 nM ( ) and 2 µM ( )
AQDS and 200 nM ( ) and 2 µM ( ) 9.6-kDa cytochrome. Control
cultures ( ) contained no added AQDS or cytochrome.
|
|
The 9.6-kDa cytochrome is not the dominant extracellular
cytochrome.
As previously reported (23), supernatants
of G. sulfurreducens cultures had a UV-visible spectrum
characteristic of c-type cytochromes with absorbance maxima
at 552, 522, and 417 nm when reduced with dithionite and an absorbance
maximum at 407 nM in the oxidized state. Similar results were noted in
this study. Redox difference absorption spectra of dithionite-reduced
minus air-oxidized preparations of supernatant collected in late
exponential phase corresponded to those of a 10 nM purified 9.6-kDa
cytochrome. Several days into stationary phase, absorbance values were
comparable to those obtained from a 50 nM concentration of the purified cytochrome.
However, when supernatants were concentrated 50-fold with centrifugal
filters (Ultrafree 15; Millipore, Bedford, Mass.) and 20-µl aliquots
were analyzed with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis
(with a 15% polyacrylamide gel buffered with tricine
[24]), the 9.6-kDa c-type cytochrome could
not be detected with either Coomassie blue stain or a more sensitive
silver stain, even though the silver stain could detect less than a 1 nM concentration of the purified 9.6-kDa cytochrome treated in a
similar manner. In studies in which a 100 nM concentration of the
9.6-kDa cytochrome (the concentration expected in supernatants
according to the results outlined in reference 23)
was added to growth medium or culture supernatant, the cytochrome was
quantitatively recovered in solution after concentration in the
centrifugal filters. This demonstrated that the failure to detect the
9.6-kDa cytochrome was not due to losses during the concentration procedure.
When the SDS gels of supernatant proteins were treated with the
heme-staining method of Goodhew et al. (7), a single protein with an apparent molecular mass of 41 kDa was detected (Fig.
2). Further analysis of this protein has
demonstrated that it is a c-type, membrane-bound cytochrome
(8). None of the 9.6-kDa cytochrome was detected even though
purified 9.6-kDa cytochrome added at a concentration equivalent to 10 nM in the culture supernatant stained for heme (Fig. 2). This result
demonstrates that it is the 41-kDa cytochrome of G. sulfurreducens rather than the 9.6-kDa cytochrome that accounts
for the c-type cytochrome spectrum that was observed in
culture supernatants of G. sulfurreducens.

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FIG. 2.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of 50×
concentrated supernatant from late-exponential cultures of G. sulfurreducens (lane B) and purified 9.6-kDa c-type
cytochrome (500 nM protein) (lane C). Lane A contains marker proteins
of molecular mass of 6.5 to 116.4 kDa.
|
|
When studies were conducted to determine whether the 41-kDa cytochrome
might act as an electron shuttle, it was found that this cytochrome,
which is highly hydrophobic, rapidly adsorbed to Fe(III) oxide. These
results indicate that the 41-kDa cytochrome is unable to serve as a
soluble electron shuttle for Fe(III) oxide reduction.
Conclusions.
These results demonstrate that the previously
proposed model (23), in which G. sulfurreducens
releases the 9.6-kDa cytochrome into the external environment in order
to serve as an electron shuttle to promote Fe(III) oxide reduction, is
highly unlikely. Closer inspection has revealed that the 9.6-kDa
cytochrome is, in fact, not released into the medium. Furthermore, even
if the 9.6-kDa cytochrome were released, it would not be an effective electron shuttle between G. sulfurreducens and Fe(III)
oxide. Independent studies have also demonstrated that the 9.6-kDa
cytochrome is not an effective electron shuttle between G. sulfurreducens and other organisms (5). Thus, it is
also unlikely that the 9.6-kDa cytochrome is involved in interspecies
electron transfer as was also previously proposed (23).
However, as previously suggested (2, 14, 18), it is likely
that the c-type cytochromes of Geobacter species
are involved in some aspect of electron transport to Fe(III) at or near
the cell surface. The role of these cytochromes in Fe(III) reduction is
currently under investigation.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We acknowledge the technical assistance of R. Allen and useful
discussions with T. Magnuson.
This work was funded by the National Science Foundation (grant no.
MCB-972 7840) and the Department of Energy NABIR program (grant no.
DE-FG02-97ER62475).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003. Phone: (413) 545-9651. Fax: (413) 545-1578. E-mail:
dlovley{at}microbio.umass.edu.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, December 1999, p. 7647-7649, Vol. 181, No. 24
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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