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University of Massachusetts Amherst

Kelly Nevin

2007

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Lack Of Electricity Production By Pelobacter Carbinolicus Indicates That The Capacity For Fe(Iii) Oxide Reduction Does Not Necessarily Confer Electron Transfer Ability To Fuel Cell Anodes, Hanno Richter, Martin Lanthier, Kelly P. Nevin, Derek Lovley Jun 2007

Lack Of Electricity Production By Pelobacter Carbinolicus Indicates That The Capacity For Fe(Iii) Oxide Reduction Does Not Necessarily Confer Electron Transfer Ability To Fuel Cell Anodes, Hanno Richter, Martin Lanthier, Kelly P. Nevin, Derek Lovley

Kelly Nevin

The ability of Pelobacter carbinolicus to oxidize electron donors with electron transfer to the anodes of microbial fuel cells was evaluated because microorganisms closely related to Pelobacter species are generally abundant on the anodes of microbial fuel cells harvesting electricity from aquatic sediments. P. carbinolicus could not produce current in a microbial fuel cell with electron donors which support Fe(III) oxide reduction by this organism. Current was produced using a coculture of P. carbinolicus and Geobacter sulfurreducens with ethanol as the fuel. Ethanol consumption was associated with the transitory accumulation of acetate and hydrogen. G. sulfurreducens alone could not metabolize …


Geonomic And Microarray Analysis Of Aromatics Degradation In Geobacter Metallireducens And Compan To A Geobacter Isolate From A Contaminated Fieldriso Site, Derek Lovley, Jessica E. Butler, Qiang He, Kelly P. Nevin, Zhili He, Jizhong Zhou Jan 2007

Geonomic And Microarray Analysis Of Aromatics Degradation In Geobacter Metallireducens And Compan To A Geobacter Isolate From A Contaminated Fieldriso Site, Derek Lovley, Jessica E. Butler, Qiang He, Kelly P. Nevin, Zhili He, Jizhong Zhou

Kelly Nevin

Background: Groundwater and subsurface environments contaminated with aromatic compounds can be remediated in situ by Geobacter species that couple oxidation of these compounds to reduction of Fe(III)-oxides. Geobacter metallireducens metabolizes many aromatic compounds, but the enzymes involved are not well known. Results: The complete G. metallireducens genome contained a 300 kb island predicted to encode enzymes for the degradation of phenol, p-cresol, 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde, 4-hydroxybenzoate, benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, and benzoate. Toluene degradation genes were encoded in a separate region. None of these genes was found in closely related species that cannot degrade aromatic compounds. Abundant transposons and phage-like genes in the …