| Literature DB >> 34554807 |
Tao Cai1,2, Hongbing Sun1,2, Jing Qiao1,2, Leilei Zhu2,3, Fan Zhang1,2, Jie Zhang2,3, Zijing Tang2,3, Xinlei Wei2,3, Jiangang Yang2,3, Qianqian Yuan2,4, Wangyin Wang5, Xue Yang2,4, Huanyu Chu2,4, Qian Wang2,4, Chun You2,3, Hongwu Ma2,4, Yuanxia Sun2,3, Yin Li1,2, Can Li5, Huifeng Jiang2,4, Qinhong Wang1,2,4, Yanhe Ma1,2,3.
Abstract
Starches, a storage form of carbohydrates, are a major source of calories in the human diet and a primary feedstock for bioindustry. We report a chemical-biochemical hybrid pathway for starch synthesis from carbon dioxide (CO2) and hydrogen in a cell-free system. The artificial starch anabolic pathway (ASAP), consisting of 11 core reactions, was drafted by computational pathway design, established through modular assembly and substitution, and optimized by protein engineering of three bottleneck-associated enzymes. In a chemoenzymatic system with spatial and temporal segregation, ASAP, driven by hydrogen, converts CO2 to starch at a rate of 22 nanomoles of CO2 per minute per milligram of total catalyst, an ~8.5-fold higher rate than starch synthesis in maize. This approach opens the way toward future chemo-biohybrid starch synthesis from CO2.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34554807 DOI: 10.1126/science.abh4049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728