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Producing fast and active Rubisco in tobacco to enhance photosynthesis
Authors:Taiyu Chen  Saba Riaz  Philip Davey  Ziyu Zhao  Yaqi Sun  Gregory F Dykes  Fei Zhou  James Hartwell  Tracy Lawson  Peter J Nixon  Yongjun Lin  Lu-Ning Liu
Abstract:Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) performs most of the carbon fixation on Earth. However, plant Rubisco is an intrinsically inefficient enzyme given its low carboxylation rate, representing a major limitation to photosynthesis. Replacing endogenous plant Rubisco with a faster Rubisco is anticipated to enhance crop photosynthesis and productivity. However, the requirement of chaperones for Rubisco expression and assembly has obstructed the efficient production of functional foreign Rubisco in chloroplasts. Here, we report the engineering of a Form 1A Rubisco from the proteobacterium Halothiobacillus neapolitanus in Escherichia coli and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) chloroplasts without any cognate chaperones. The native tobacco gene encoding Rubisco large subunit was genetically replaced with H. neapolitanus Rubisco (HnRubisco) large and small subunit genes. We show that HnRubisco subunits can form functional L8S8 hexadecamers in tobacco chloroplasts at high efficiency, accounting for ∼40% of the wild-type tobacco Rubisco content. The chloroplast-expressed HnRubisco displayed a ∼2-fold greater carboxylation rate and supported a similar autotrophic growth rate of transgenic plants to that of wild-type in air supplemented with 1% CO2. This study represents a step toward the engineering of a fast and highly active Rubisco in chloroplasts to improve crop photosynthesis and growth.

Introducing a proteobacterial Rubisco with a greater carboxylation rate and a higher content of active sites into tobacco chloroplasts supports photosynthesis and growth at high CO2 concentrations.

IN A NUTSHELL Background: Rubisco is the key enzyme responsible for fixing CO2. However, due to its intrinsically low catalytic turnover rate, Rubisco represents the ultimate rate-limiting step in plant photosynthesis. Improving Rubisco carboxylation and assembly in plants has been a long-standing challenge in crop engineering to meet the pressing need for increased global food production. There is mounting interest in replacing endogenous plant Rubisco with active non-native Rubisco candidates from other organisms to enhance photosynthetic carbon fixation. Question: The folding and assembly of Rubisco in chloroplasts are intricate processes that usually require a series of ancillary factors. Seeking a new Rubisco variant that can be produced in chloroplasts with a high yield and high catalytic performance, without the requirement for cognate assembly factors and activases, could help improve carbon fixation in crop plants. Finding: In this work, we introduced a Rubisco from a proteobacterium into tobacco chloroplasts to replace native tobacco Rubisco. In the proteobacteria, Rubisco is naturally encapsulated at a high density within a CO2-fixing protein organelle, the carboxysome. The foreign Rubisco derived from bacteria formed efficiently and was functional in chloroplasts without the need for exogenous chaperones. Intriguingly, the chloroplast-expressed bacterial Rubisco supported the autotrophic growth of transgenic plants at a similar rate to wild-type plants at 1% CO2. Next Step: The successful production of functional bacterial Rubisco represents a step toward installing faster, highly active Rubisco, functional carboxysomes, and eventually active CO2 concentration mechanisms into chloroplasts to improve Rubisco carboxylation, with the intent of enhancing crop photosynthesis and crop yield on a global scale.
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