Phosphoglycolate salvage in a chemolithoautotroph using the Calvin cycle

Author:

Claassens Nico J.ORCID,Scarinci GiovanniORCID,Fischer AxelORCID,Flamholz Avi I.ORCID,Newell William,Frielingsdorf StefanORCID,Lenz OliverORCID,Bar-Even ArrenORCID

Abstract

Carbon fixation via the Calvin cycle is constrained by the side activity of Rubisco with dioxygen, generating 2-phosphoglycolate. The metabolic recycling of phosphoglycolate was extensively studied in photoautotrophic organisms, including plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, where it is referred to as photorespiration. While receiving little attention so far, aerobic chemolithoautotrophic bacteria that operate the Calvin cycle independent of light must also recycle phosphoglycolate. As the term photorespiration is inappropriate for describing phosphoglycolate recycling in these nonphotosynthetic autotrophs, we suggest the more general term “phosphoglycolate salvage.” Here, we study phosphoglycolate salvage in the model chemolithoautotrophCupriavidus necatorH16 (Ralstonia eutrophaH16) by characterizing the proxy process of glycolate metabolism, performing comparative transcriptomics of autotrophic growth under low and high CO2concentrations, and testing autotrophic growth phenotypes of gene deletion strains at ambient CO2. We find that the canonical plant-like C2cycle does not operate in this bacterium, and instead, the bacterial-like glycerate pathway is the main route for phosphoglycolate salvage. Upon disruption of the glycerate pathway, we find that an oxidative pathway, which we term the malate cycle, supports phosphoglycolate salvage. In this cycle, glyoxylate is condensed with acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) to give malate, which undergoes two oxidative decarboxylation steps to regenerate acetyl-CoA. When both pathways are disrupted, autotrophic growth is abolished at ambient CO2. We present bioinformatic data suggesting that the malate cycle may support phosphoglycolate salvage in diverse chemolithoautotrophic bacteria. This study thus demonstrates a so far unknown phosphoglycolate salvage pathway, highlighting important diversity in microbial carbon fixation metabolism.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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