Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, and Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Environmental and nutritional conditions that optimize the yield of hydrogen (H
2
) from water using a two-step photosynthesis/fermentation (P/F) process are reported for the hypercarbonate-requiring cyanobacterium “
Arthrospira maxima
.” Our observations lead to four main conclusions broadly applicable to fermentative H
2
production by bacteria: (i) anaerobic H
2
production in the dark from whole cells catalyzed by a bidirectional [NiFe] hydrogenase is demonstrated to occur in two temporal phases involving two distinct metabolic processes that are linked to prior light-dependent production of NADPH (photosynthetic) and dark/anaerobic production of NADH (fermentative), respectively; (ii) H
2
evolution from these reductants represents a major pathway for energy production (ATP) during fermentation by regenerating NAD
+
essential for glycolysis of glycogen and catabolism of other substrates; (iii) nitrate removal during fermentative H
2
evolution is shown to produce an immediate and large stimulation of H
2
, as nitrate is a competing substrate for consumption of NAD(P)H, which is distinct from its slower effect of stimulating glycogen accumulation; (iv) environmental and nutritional conditions that increase anaerobic ATP production, prior glycogen accumulation (in the light), and the intracellular reduction potential (NADH/NAD
+
ratio) are shown to be the key variables for elevating H
2
evolution. Optimization of these conditions and culture age increases the H
2
yield from a single P/F cycle using concentrated cells to 36 ml of H
2
/g (dry weight) and a maximum 18% H
2
in the headspace. H
2
yield was found to be limited by the hydrogenase-mediated H
2
uptake reaction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
108 articles.
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