Apr 24, 2024
4:00pm - 4:15pm
Room 427, Level 4, Summit
Glenn Quek1,Guillermo Bazan1,Ricardo Vázquez2,Samantha Mccuskey1,Fernando Garcia1
National University of Singapore1,Indiana University Bloomington2
Glenn Quek1,Guillermo Bazan1,Ricardo Vázquez2,Samantha Mccuskey1,Fernando Garcia1
National University of Singapore1,Indiana University Bloomington2
Interfacing bacteria as biocatalysts with an electrode provides the basis for emerging bioelectrochemical systems that enable sustainable energy interconversion between electrical and chemical energy. Electron transfer rates at the abiotic-biotic interface are, however, often limited by poor electrical contacts and the intrinsically insulating cell membranes. Herein, we report the first example of an n-type redox-active conjugated oligoelectrolyte, namely <b>COE-NDI</b>, which spontaneously intercalates into cell membranes and mimics the function of endogenous transmembrane electron transport proteins. The incorporation of <b>COE-NDI</b> into <i>Shewanella oneidensis </i>MR-1 cells amplifies current uptake from the electrode by 4-fold, resulting in the enhanced bio-electroreduction of fumarate to succinate. Moreover, <b>COE-NDI</b> can serve as a “protein prosthetic” to rescue current uptake in non-electrogenic knockout mutants.