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Autocatalytic effect boosts the production of medium-chain hydrocarbons by fatty acid photodecarboxylase.

Poutoum-Palakiyem SamireBo ZhuangBertrand LégeretÁngel Baca-PorcelGilles PeltierDamien SoriguéAlexey AleksandrovFrédéric BeissonPavel Müller
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Ongoing climate change is driving the search for renewable and carbon-neutral alternatives to fossil fuels. Photocatalytic conversion of fatty acids to hydrocarbons by fatty acid photodecarboxylase (FAP) represents a promising route to green fuels. However, the alleged low activity of FAP on C2 to C12 fatty acids seemed to preclude the use for synthesis of gasoline-range hydrocarbons. Here, we reveal that Chlorella variabilis FAP ( Cv FAP) can convert n -octanoic acid in vitro four times faster than n -hexadecanoic acid, its best substrate reported to date. In vivo, this translates into a Cv FAP-based production rate over 10-fold higher for n -heptane than for n -pentadecane. Time-resolved spectroscopy and molecular modeling demonstrate that Cv FAP's high catalytic activity on n -octanoic acid is, in part, due to an autocatalytic effect of its n -heptane product, which fills the rest of the binding pocket. These results represent an important step toward a bio-based and light-driven production of gasoline-like hydrocarbons.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • climate change
  • high resolution
  • genome wide
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • risk assessment
  • highly efficient