11.1 Introduction
The concept of bioelectronics, proposed in 1968, means the combination between the
biological system and the field of electronics. This field focuses on the different me
chanisms of electron transfer in a biological system and their potential applications.
However, bioelectronics, according to pioneer Göpel, aimed at the direct combination
between biomolecular and electronic structures [1]. This concept is defined by the
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) as the application of bio
molecular principles to microelectronics [2]. Recently, with the discovery of electrically
conductive bacterial structures, termed microbial nanowires, new fields had emerged in
bioelectronics. The bacterial nanowires structure is an extracellular appendage that has
been serving as a strategy for electron transport in diverse microbes. Generally, two
mechanisms can be implicated in microbes electrochemically direct and mediated elec
tron transfer. In direct electron transfer (DET), the electron transfers between micro
organisms and solid acceptors implicate on bacteria cell membrane’s contact. The DET
may also involve insoluble Fe (III) or an anode of microbial bioelectrochemical systems
(BES). This type was first discovered and described in Geobacter species which are ef
fective in the bioremediation of subsurface contaminants [3]. Recently, several studies
demonstrated the electron transport along bacterial nanowires. This discovery has been
observed in some Geobacter, Shewanella, and Cyanobacterium species [4]. The electronically
conducting structure termed nanowires permits these bacteria to reach the solid electron
acceptors without cell contact. The second mechanism is called mediated electron transfer
(MET). The MET is facilitated by using artificial mediator compounds or by a biocatalyst
and classified according to the origin and redox species. For growth, the bacteria can
generate energy by using diverse strategies. The nanowires represent nano-objects pro
duced by microbes that enable the transfer of electrons to extracellular electron acceptors.
The electron transfered through the nanowires permit possibilities for cell-cell and cell-
surface interaction. Through that, their potential applications in bioremediation, bioengi
neering, and bioelectronics have been demonstrated. In this chapter, we describe different
non-flagella proteinaceous appendages such as Chaperone-Usher pili (CU pili), curli pili,
and type 3 and 4 secretion system pili (T3SS and T4SSs). The diverse types of extracellular
electron transfer exhibited by microbial cells were presented. A brief taxonomy, principal
characteristics, and even the pili type 4 assemblage of the two types of species implicated in
electron transfer via nanowires Geobacter and Shewanella were detailed. We also discuss
important aspects of microbial nanowires (MNWs) including their types, roles, and me
chanisms of electron transfer in Geobacter and Shewanella species. Along with that, the po
tential applications of both bacteria in the field of bioremediation, bioelectricity, and energy
production are also reviewed.
11.2 Microbial Pilus: From Fimbriae to Nanowires
The term “pili” (Latin for hair), first identified by Duguid et al. [5], were non-flagellar
proteinaceous appendages that occur among Gram-negative bacteria. The pili have been
mostly referred to as “filaments,” “bristles,” “fimbriae,” or “pili” by Ottow [6]. The pili,
introduced in 1959 [7], were distinguished mainly based on morphology, which can be
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Bioelectronics