Login / Signup

A systematic exploration of bacterial form I rubisco maximal carboxylation rates.

Benoit de PinsLior GreenspoonYinon M Bar-OnMelina ShamshoumRoee Ben-NissanEliya MilshteinDan DavidiItai SharonOliver Mueller-CajarElad NoorRon Milo
Published in: The EMBO journal (2024)
Autotrophy is the basis for complex life on Earth. Central to this process is rubisco-the enzyme that catalyzes almost all carbon fixation on the planet. Yet, with only a small fraction of rubisco diversity kinetically characterized so far, the underlying biological factors driving the evolution of fast rubiscos in nature remain unclear. We conducted a high-throughput kinetic characterization of over 100 bacterial form I rubiscos, the most ubiquitous group of rubisco sequences in nature, to uncover the determinants of rubisco's carboxylation velocity. We show that the presence of a carboxysome CO 2 concentrating mechanism correlates with faster rubiscos with a median fivefold higher rate. In contrast to prior studies, we find that rubiscos originating from α-cyanobacteria exhibit the highest carboxylation rates among form I enzymes (≈10 s -1 median versus <7 s -1 in other groups). Our study systematically reveals biological and environmental properties associated with kinetic variation across rubiscos from nature.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • magnetic resonance
  • minimally invasive
  • computed tomography
  • risk assessment
  • heart rate
  • human health
  • blood pressure
  • climate change