A 3-Hydroxypropionate/4-Hydroxybutyrate Autotrophic Carbon Dioxide Assimilation Pathway in Archaea
University of Freiburg · Philipps University of Marburg
Abstract
The assimilation of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) into organic material is quantitatively the most important biosynthetic process. We discovered that an autotrophic member of the archaeal order Sulfolobales, Metallosphaera sedula , fixed CO 2 with acetyl–coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA)/propionyl-CoA carboxylase as the key carboxylating enzyme. In this system, one acetyl-CoA and two bicarbonate molecules were reductively converted via 3-hydroxypropionate to succinyl-CoA. This intermediate was reduced to 4-hydroxybutyrate and converted into two acetyl-CoA molecules via 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase. The key genes of this pathway were found not only in Metallosphaera but also in Sulfolobus, Archaeoglobus , and Cenarchaeum…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Chemistry
- Autotroph
- Dehydratase
- Biochemistry
- Archaea
- Carbon fixation
- Enzyme
- Pyruvate carboxylase
- Life below water