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From chaperonins to Rubisco assembly and metabolic repair
Authors:Manajit Hayer‐Hartl
Affiliation:Department of Cellular Biochemistry, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, GermanyManajit Hayer‐Hartl is the co‐recipient of the 2017 Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Award.
Abstract:Ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) mediates the fixation of atmospheric CO2 in photosynthesis by catalyzing the carboxylation of the 5‐carbon sugar ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP). Despite its pivotal role, Rubisco is an inefficient enzyme and thus has been a key target for bioengineering. However, efforts to increase crop yields by Rubisco engineering remain unsuccessful, due in part to the complex machinery of molecular chaperones required for Rubisco biogenesis and metabolic repair. While the large subunit of Rubisco generally requires the chaperonin system for folding, the evolution of the hexadecameric Rubisco from its dimeric precursor resulted in the dependence on an array of additional factors required for assembly. Moreover, Rubisco function can be inhibited by a range of sugar‐phosphate ligands. Metabolic repair of Rubisco depends on remodeling by the ATP‐dependent Rubisco activase and hydrolysis of inhibitors by specific phosphatases. This review highlights our work toward understanding the structure and mechanism of these auxiliary machineries.
Keywords:Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin  molecular chaperones  chaperonin  protein folding  assembly  Rubisco  Rubisco activase  phosphatase  metabolic repair
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