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Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity

CO (2) is converted into biomass almost solely by the enzyme rubisco. The poor carboxylation properties of plant rubiscos have led to efforts that made it the most kinetically characterized enzyme, yet these studies focused on < 5% of its natural diversity. Here, we searched for fast‐carboxylatin...

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Autores principales: Davidi, Dan, Shamshoum, Melina, Guo, Zhijun, Bar‐On, Yinon M, Prywes, Noam, Oz, Aia, Jablonska, Jagoda, Flamholz, Avi, Wernick, David G, Antonovsky, Niv, de Pins, Benoit, Shachar, Lior, Hochhauser, Dina, Peleg, Yoav, Albeck, Shira, Sharon, Itai, Mueller‐Cajar, Oliver, Milo, Ron
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7507306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32500941
http://dx.doi.org/10.15252/embj.2019104081
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author Davidi, Dan
Shamshoum, Melina
Guo, Zhijun
Bar‐On, Yinon M
Prywes, Noam
Oz, Aia
Jablonska, Jagoda
Flamholz, Avi
Wernick, David G
Antonovsky, Niv
de Pins, Benoit
Shachar, Lior
Hochhauser, Dina
Peleg, Yoav
Albeck, Shira
Sharon, Itai
Mueller‐Cajar, Oliver
Milo, Ron
author_facet Davidi, Dan
Shamshoum, Melina
Guo, Zhijun
Bar‐On, Yinon M
Prywes, Noam
Oz, Aia
Jablonska, Jagoda
Flamholz, Avi
Wernick, David G
Antonovsky, Niv
de Pins, Benoit
Shachar, Lior
Hochhauser, Dina
Peleg, Yoav
Albeck, Shira
Sharon, Itai
Mueller‐Cajar, Oliver
Milo, Ron
author_sort Davidi, Dan
collection PubMed
description CO (2) is converted into biomass almost solely by the enzyme rubisco. The poor carboxylation properties of plant rubiscos have led to efforts that made it the most kinetically characterized enzyme, yet these studies focused on < 5% of its natural diversity. Here, we searched for fast‐carboxylating variants by systematically mining genomic and metagenomic data. Approximately 33,000 unique rubisco sequences were identified and clustered into ≈ 1,000 similarity groups. We then synthesized, purified, and biochemically tested the carboxylation rates of 143 representatives, spanning all clusters of form‐II and form‐II/III rubiscos. Most variants (> 100) were active in vitro, with the fastest having a turnover number of 22 ± 1 s(−1)—sixfold faster than the median plant rubisco and nearly twofold faster than the fastest measured rubisco to date. Unlike rubiscos from plants and cyanobacteria, the fastest variants discovered here are homodimers and exhibit a much simpler folding and activation kinetics. Our pipeline can be utilized to explore the kinetic space of other enzymes of interest, allowing us to get a better view of the biosynthetic potential of the biosphere.
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spelling pubmed-75073062020-09-28 Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity Davidi, Dan Shamshoum, Melina Guo, Zhijun Bar‐On, Yinon M Prywes, Noam Oz, Aia Jablonska, Jagoda Flamholz, Avi Wernick, David G Antonovsky, Niv de Pins, Benoit Shachar, Lior Hochhauser, Dina Peleg, Yoav Albeck, Shira Sharon, Itai Mueller‐Cajar, Oliver Milo, Ron EMBO J Resource CO (2) is converted into biomass almost solely by the enzyme rubisco. The poor carboxylation properties of plant rubiscos have led to efforts that made it the most kinetically characterized enzyme, yet these studies focused on < 5% of its natural diversity. Here, we searched for fast‐carboxylating variants by systematically mining genomic and metagenomic data. Approximately 33,000 unique rubisco sequences were identified and clustered into ≈ 1,000 similarity groups. We then synthesized, purified, and biochemically tested the carboxylation rates of 143 representatives, spanning all clusters of form‐II and form‐II/III rubiscos. Most variants (> 100) were active in vitro, with the fastest having a turnover number of 22 ± 1 s(−1)—sixfold faster than the median plant rubisco and nearly twofold faster than the fastest measured rubisco to date. Unlike rubiscos from plants and cyanobacteria, the fastest variants discovered here are homodimers and exhibit a much simpler folding and activation kinetics. Our pipeline can be utilized to explore the kinetic space of other enzymes of interest, allowing us to get a better view of the biosynthetic potential of the biosphere. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-06-05 2020-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7507306/ /pubmed/32500941 http://dx.doi.org/10.15252/embj.2019104081 Text en ©2020 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Resource
Davidi, Dan
Shamshoum, Melina
Guo, Zhijun
Bar‐On, Yinon M
Prywes, Noam
Oz, Aia
Jablonska, Jagoda
Flamholz, Avi
Wernick, David G
Antonovsky, Niv
de Pins, Benoit
Shachar, Lior
Hochhauser, Dina
Peleg, Yoav
Albeck, Shira
Sharon, Itai
Mueller‐Cajar, Oliver
Milo, Ron
Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title_full Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title_fullStr Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title_full_unstemmed Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title_short Highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
title_sort highly active rubiscos discovered by systematic interrogation of natural sequence diversity
topic Resource
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7507306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32500941
http://dx.doi.org/10.15252/embj.2019104081
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