An ultra-stable protein nanowire made by bacteria provides clues to combating climate change
Sibel Ebru Yalcin. Design: Ella Maru Studio
A potential solution to this vicious circle could be another kind of microbes that eat up to 80% of methane flux from ocean sediments that protects the Earth. How microbes serve as both the biggest producers as well as consumers of methane has remained a mystery because they are very difficult to study in the laboratory. In Nature Microbiology, surprising wire-like properties of a protein highly similar to the protein used by methane-eating microbes, is reported by Yale team led by Yangqi Gu, and Nikhil Malvankar, of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Microbial Sciences Institute.
The team had previously shown that this protein nanowire shows the highest conductivity known to date, allowing generation of highest electric power by any bacteria. But to date, no one had discovered how bacteria make them and why they show such extremely high conductivity.
Using cryo-electron microscopy, Yangqi and the team were able to see the nanowire’s atomic structure and discover that hemes packed closely to move electrons very fast with ultra-high stability. It also explains how these bacteria can survive without oxygen-like membrane-ingestible molecules and form communities that can send electrons over 100-times bacterial size. Yangqi and the team also built nanowires synthetically to explain how bacteria make nanowires on demand.
“We are using these heme wires to generate electricity and to combat climate change by understanding how methane-eating microbes use similar heme wires” Malvankar said.
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