| Literature DB >> 28694846 |
Sriram Satagopan1, Yuan Sun2, Jon R Parquette2, F Robert Tabita1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With increasing concerns over global warming and depletion of fossil-fuel reserves, it is attractive to develop innovative strategies to assimilate CO2, a greenhouse gas, into usable organic carbon. Cell-free systems can be designed to operate as catalytic platforms with enzymes that offer exceptional selectivity and efficiency, without the need to support ancillary reactions of metabolic pathways operating in intact cells. Such systems are yet to be exploited for applications involving CO2 utilization and subsequent conversion to valuable products, including biofuels. The Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle and the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) play a pivotal role in global CO2 fixation.Entities:
Keywords: Bioconversion; CO2 fixation; Cell-free systems; Nanostructures; Pathway engineering; RubisCO
Year: 2017 PMID: 28694846 PMCID: PMC5501267 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-017-0861-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Illustration of the assembly of nanostructures with RubisCO driven by electrostatic interactions. a Structures of compounds that self-assemble into either nanotubes (A/B) or nanofibers (C). b Either the dimeric R. rubrum form II RubisCO (PDB id—5RUB) or the hexadecameric R. eutropha form I RubisCO (PDB id—1BXN) were used in these studies
Fig. 2RubisCO loading with fixed amounts of pre-assembled nanotube A (a 0.75 mg/mL) or nanofiber C (b 0.9 mg/mL). Plots show activities measured from nanostructure-RubisCO complexes that had been loaded with varying amounts of either form I (blue) or form II (orange) RubisCO enzymes. Recovery percentages were calculated relative to the enzyme activities in the corresponding samples with unbound RubisCO. Activities were also measured from identical form I (gray) or form II (yellow) nanofiber C preparations (b) that had been supplemented with 1 mg/mL bovine serum albumin (BSA) during RubisCO loading
Fig. 3TEM images of nanostructures. a Nanotubes and nanofibers formed from compounds A (left) and C (right), respectively, stained with uranyl acetate. b TEM images of Ni–NTA Nanogold® particles bound to the hexa-histidine tagged form I RubisCO and associated with either nanotube A (left) or nanofiber C (right). Images are representative of multiple samples imaged from independent preparations. For better clarity, a close-up view of a single nanostructure is shown to the left of each image
Fig. 4Schematic of CO2-fixation pathways assembled in nanostructures. Cascade of enzymatic steps employed to convert either ribose-5-phosphate (R-5-P) (pathway 1 a) or glucose (pathway 2 b) to 3-PGA
Activities measured for the conversion of R-5-P to 3-PGA in nanostructure-multienzyme complexes with R. eutropha form I (FI) or R. rubrum form II (FII) RubisCO, PRK and PRI
| Enzyme cascade | Combined activitya (μmoles/min-mg) | % Activity ret.b |
|---|---|---|
| Unbound FI/PRK/PRI | 4.08 | 100 |
| FI/PRK/PRI-nanotube | 3.39 | 83 |
| FI/PRK/PRI-nanotube | 3.49 | 86 |
| FI/PRK/PRI-nanofiber | 3.94 | 97 |
| Unbound FII, PRK and PRI | 3.03 | 100 |
| FII/PRK/PRI-nanotube | 2.45 | 81 |
| FII/PRK/PRI-nanotube | 2.52 | 83 |
| FII/PRK/PRI-nanofiber | 1.90 | 63 |
aCalculated from stable 14CO2 fixed
bActivities retained are presented relative to an unbound enzyme mixture comprising all three enzymes. Activity numbers are from one of two independently prepared and assayed nanostructure complexes that yielded similar results
Activities measured for the conversion of glucose to 3-PGA in nanostructure-multienzyme complexes with R. rubrum form II (FII) RubisCO
| Enzyme cascade | Combined activitya (μmoles/min-mg) | % Activity ret.b |
|---|---|---|
| Unbound FII and glucose pathwayc | 0.259 | 100 |
| FII and glucose pathwayc in nanotube | 0.100 | 39 |
| FII and glucose pathwayc in nanotube | 0.110 | 42 |
| FII and glucose pathwayc in nanofiber | 0.115 | 44 |
aCalculated from stable 14CO2 fixed
bActivities retained are presented relative to an unbound enzyme mixture comprising all enzymes. Activity numbers are from one of the two assays conducted with independently prepared and assayed nanostructure complexes, which gave similar results
cGlucose pathway comprises all enzymes that constitute pathway 2
Fig. 5Proteolytic sensitivities of RubisCO and PRK enzymes in nanostructure complexes. Unbound or nanostructure-associated RubisCO (a, b) or PRK (c) were treated with subtilisin for various times and residual enzymatic activities were measured for each time point. Data shown here is representative of two independent preparations that gave similar results. Nanotubes A or B provided identical levels of protection to all enzymes and hence the data is shown for only one of them (i.e., nanotube B), along with the data for nanofiber C
Catalytic properties of RubisCO enzymes (R. eutropha form I (FI) and R. rubrum form II (FII) associated with nanostructures
| Enzymea |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unbound FI | 79 ± 1 | 2.6 ± 0.5 | 41 ± 4 | 1093 ± 141 | 27 |
| FI-nanotube | 95 ± 3d | 1.8 ± 0.1e | 53 ± 7 | 1756 ± 341 | 33 |
| FI-nanofiber | 88 ± 1d | 2.2 ± 0.1e | 56 ± 8 | 1693 ± 383 | 30 |
| Unbound FII | 17 ± 2 | 1.2 ± 0.1 | 100 ± 7 | 96 ± 26 | 1.0 |
| FII-nanotube | 17 ± 1 | 0.6 ± 0.2e | 120 ± 24 | 170 ± 41 | 1.4 |
| FII in nanofiber | 17 ± 1 | 0.6 ± 0.1e | 96 ± 16 | 95 ± 32 | 1.0 |
aAssociation with either of the nanotubes (i.e., A or B) imparted similar properties to both form I (FI) and form II (FII) enzymes
bValues are the mean ± standard deviation (n−1) of at least three independent nanostructure-enzyme complex preparations
cCalculated values
dAn unpaired t test with Ω values obtained from three independent experiments gave p values of 0.0006 and 0.0003 for FI-nanotube B and FI-nanofiber C, respectively, relative to unbound FI
eThese k cat values were calculated based on the initial amounts of enzyme added to constitute nanostructure-RubisCO complexes. They are not significantly different from the value measured with the unbound enzyme, if the percentage recoveries are factored into the calculations (Additional file 1: Table S3c) for each experiment
Fig. 6Reaction velocity measurements of R. eutropha form I RubisCO as a function of CO2 concentration in the presence (open circles) or absence (closed circles) of saturating levels of oxygen (i.e., 1230 μM). a Michaelis–Menten curves for carboxylation activities measured with unbound R. eutropha form I RubisCO. b Michaelis–Menten curves for carboxylation activities measured with nanotube B-form I RubisCO complexes. The extent of oxygen inhibition for each enzyme preparation is indicated (double-headed arrows). The K O (K I) for O2 was enhanced about 1.6-fold for the nanotube B-form I enzyme complex compared to the unbound enzyme (see Table 3 for kinetic constants). The average value and error bar for each data point was calculated with values obtained from two independent assays (with different preparations) performed with identical CO2 concentrations