Publications

Journal articles

August 2024

Imidazolium-based ionic liquids support biosimilar flavin electron transfer

Anderson, Grace I.; Agee, Alec A.; Furst, Ariel L.

Abstract

Understanding electron transport with electroactive microbes is key to engineering effective and scalable bio-electrochemical technologies. Much of this electron transfer occurs through small-molecule flavin mediators that perform one-electron transfers in abiotic systems but concerted two-electron transfer in biological systems, rendering abiotic systems less efficient. To boost efficiency, the principles guiding flavin electron transfer must be elucidated, necessitating a tunable system. Ionic liquids (ILs) offer such a platform due to their chemical diversity. In particular, imidazolium-containing ILs that resemble the amino acid histidine are bio-similar electrolytes that enable the study of flavin electron transfer. Using the model IL 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium ([Emim][BF4]), we observe concerted two-electron transfer between flavin mononucleotide and an unmodified glassy carbon electrode surface, while a one-electron transfer occurs in standard inorganic electrolytes. This work demonstrates the power of ILs to enable the mechanistic study of biological electron transfer, providing critical guidelines for improving electrochemical technologies based on these biological properties.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Dr Jonathan Cottet for support with conductivity measurements and Dr Jerome Babauta of Gamry Instruments for guidance on EIS experiments. Research reported in this publication was supported by funding from the Army Re-search Office (W911NF- 22-1-0106), the National Institutes of Health-NIEHS (Core Center Grants P42-ES027707 and P30-ES002109), and the MIT Energy Initiative (Seed Grant). G. A. and A. A. are supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program under grants 2141064, 1745302, and 1650114.