Affiliation:
1. Academia Sinica, Institute of Biological Chemistry
2. Academia Sinica
3. Graduate Institute of Cancer Biology and Drug Discovery
Abstract
Abstract
Regulation of CO2 fixation in cyanobacteria is important both for the organism and the global carbon balance. Here we show that phosphoketolase in Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 (SeXPK) possesses a distinct ATP sensing mechanism, which upon ATP drops, allows SeXPK to divert precursors of the RuBisCO substrate away from the Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle. Deleting the SeXPK gene increased CO2 fixation particularly during light-dark transitions. In high-density cultures, the Dxpk strain showed a 60% increase in carbon fixation, and unexpectedly resulted in sucrose secretion without any pathway engineering. Using cryo-EM analysis, we discovered that these functions were enabled by a unique allosteric regulatory site involving two subunits jointly binding two ATP, which constantly suppresses the activity of SeXPK until the ATP level drops. This magnesium-independent ATP allosteric site is present in many species across all three domains of life, where it may also play important regulatory functions.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC