City
Epaper

Study finds how solar-powered microbes turn CO2 into bioplastic

By ANI | Updated: July 28, 2023 23:45 IST

New York [US], July 28 : Scientists have created microbe-semiconductor biohybrids that merge the biosynthetic power of living systems ...

Open in App

New York [US], July 28 : Scientists have created microbe-semiconductor biohybrids that merge the biosynthetic power of living systems with the ability of semiconductors to harvest light.

The study was published in the journal, 'Nature Chemistry'.

These microorganisms use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide into value-added chemical products, such as bioplastics and biofuels. But how that energy transport occurs in such a tiny, complex system, and whether the process can be improved, is still unclear.

Researchers have developed a multimodal platform to image these biohybrids with single-cell resolution, to better understand how they function and how they can be optimized for more efficient energy conversion.

The project was led by Peng Chen, professor of chemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences. The effort is an offshoot of a larger collaboration – with Tobias Hanrath, professor at the Smith School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in Cornell Engineering, and Buz Barstow, assistant professor of biological and environmental engineering in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences – that was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to explore microscopic imaging of microbes as a way to advance bioenergy research.

Biohybrid research has typically been conducted with bacteria in bulk – essentially a large amount of cells in a bucket, Peng said – emphasizing the overall yield of the value-added chemicals and the collective behaviors of the cells, rather than the underlying mechanism that enables the complex chemical transformation.

“Biology is very heterogeneous. The individual cells are very different. Now, in order to interrogate it better, you really need to measure it at a single-cell level,” Chen said. “This is where we come in. We provide quantitative assessments of protein behaviors and also a mechanistic understanding of how the electron transport occurs from the semiconductor to the bacteria cell.”

The new platform combined multi-channel fluorescence imaging with photoelectrochemical current mapping to survey the bacterium Ralstonia eutropha. The platform was able to simultaneously image, track and quantitate multiple proteins in the cell while also measuring the flow of electrons, ultimately correlating the cellular protein properties and electron transport processes.

The researchers successfully differentiated the functional roles of two types of hydrogenases – one bound to the cell’s membrane, and a soluble one in the cytoplasm – that help metabolize hydrogen and drive CO2 fixation. While the soluble hydrogenase is known to be critical for metabolizing hydrogen, the researchers found that the membrane-bound hydrogenase, while less important, actually facilitates the process and makes it more efficient.

In addition, the researchers obtained the first experimental evidence that the bacteria can uptake a large amount of electrons from semiconductor photocatalysts. The team measured the electron current and found it be three orders of magnitude larger than what scientists previously thought, which suggests that future bacteria strains could be engineered to improve the efficiency of energy conversion.

The researchers also discovered that membrane-bound and soluble hydrogenases play an important role in mediating the electron transport from the semiconductor into the cell. Meanwhile, not only can the cell accept electrons; it can also spit them out in the opposite direction, without the assistance of hydrogenases.

The imaging platform is generalizable enough that it can be used to study other biological-inorganic systems, including yeast, and for other processes, such as nitrogen fixation and pollutant removal.

“Our multimodal imaging platform is powerful, but it of course has its own limits,” Chen said. “We can image and study proteins, but our approach does not allow us to analyze small molecule compositions. And so one can think about further integrating our approach with other techniques – for example, nanoscale mass spectrometry – so it would be really powerful. We’re not there yet.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

Social Viral'Flight Le Leta': Netizens React as Mumbai-Delhi Tejas Rajdhani Express Ticket Costs Rs 5,500

EntertainmentRandeep Hooda and Lin Laishram Join Archery Premier League as Co-Owners of Delhi's Prithviraj Yodhas

EntertainmentRani Mukerji Breaks Silence on Work Hour Debate Amid Deepika Padukone’s Kalki 2898 AD and Spirit Row

NationalDelhi: Food Delivery Worker Bullied in Narela, Drunken Customer Misbehaves with Police

NationalZubeen Garg Death Probe: Festival Organiser Shyamkanu Mahanta and Manager Siddhartha Sharma Arrested in Delhi, Brought to Guwahati

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyEbola virus strain found in semen, breast milk months after infection: Study

TechnologyStock market ends higher amid buying in banking, metal stocks

TechnologyPM Modi to unveil youth-focused schemes worth Rs 62,000 crore tomorrow

TechnologyGST reforms boosting economy, easing lives of common people: N.K. Singh

TechnologyIndia's IT services to see recovery in FY27; long-term growth rate within 4 to 5 pc