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Membrane-anchored HDCR nanowires drive hydrogen-powered CO2 fixation
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4647804
Author(s) Dietrich, Helge M.; Righetto, Ricardo D.; Kumar, Anuj; Wietrzynski, Wojciech; Trischler, Raphael; Schuller, Sandra K.; Wagner, Jonathan; Schwarz, Fabian M.; Engel, Benjamin D.; Müller, Volker; Schuller, Jan M.
Author(s) at UniBasel Diogo Righetto, Ricardo
Wietrzynski, Wojciech
Engel, Ben
Year 2022
Title Membrane-anchored HDCR nanowires drive hydrogen-powered CO2 fixation
Journal Nature
Volume 607
Number 7920
Pages / Article-Number 823-830
Mesh terms Carbon Dioxide, metabolism; Cell Membrane, enzymology; Cryoelectron Microscopy; Enzyme Stability; Hydrogen, metabolism; Hydrogenase, chemistry, genetics, metabolism, ultrastructure; Mutation; Nanowires; Protein Multimerization; Protein Subunits, chemistry, metabolism; Thermoanaerobacter, cytology, enzymology
Abstract Filamentous enzymes have been found in all domains of life, but the advantage of filamentation is often elusive. Some anaerobic, autotrophic bacteria have an unusual filamentous enzyme for CO2 fixation-hydrogen-dependent CO2 reductase (HDCR)-which directly converts H2 and CO2 into formic acid. HDCR reduces CO2 with a higher activity than any other known biological or chemical catalyst, and it has therefore gained considerable interest in two areas of global relevance: hydrogen storage and combating climate change by capturing atmospheric CO2. However, the mechanistic basis of the high catalytic turnover rate of HDCR has remained unknown. Here we use cryo-electron microscopy to reveal the structure of a short HDCR filament from the acetogenic bacterium Thermoanaerobacter kivui. The minimum repeating unit is a hexamer that consists of a formate dehydrogenase (FdhF) and two hydrogenases (HydA2) bound around a central core of hydrogenase Fe-S subunits, one HycB3 and two HycB4. These small bacterial polyferredoxin-like proteins oligomerize through their C-terminal helices to form the backbone of the filament. By combining structure-directed mutagenesis with enzymatic analysis, we show that filamentation and rapid electron transfer through the filament enhance the activity of HDCR. To investigate the structure of HDCR in situ, we imaged T. kivui cells with cryo-electron tomography and found that HDCR filaments bundle into large ring-shaped superstructures attached to the plasma membrane. This supramolecular organization may further enhance the stability and connectivity of HDCR to form a specialized metabolic subcompartment within the cell.
Publisher Macmillan
ISSN/ISBN 0028-0836 ; 1476-4687
URL https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04971-z
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/89570/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1038/s41586-022-04971-z
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35859174
ISI-Number WOS:000828280500001
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
Top-publication of... Engel, Ben
 
   

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