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Exploring alternative pathways for the in vitro...
Journal article

Exploring alternative pathways for the in vitro establishment of the HOPAC cycle for synthetic CO2 fixation

Abstract

Nature has evolved eight different pathways for the capture and conversion of CO2, including the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle of photosynthesis. Yet, these pathways underlie constrains and only represent a fraction of the thousands of theoretically possible solutions. To overcome the limitations of natural evolution, we introduce the HydrOxyPropionyl-CoA/Acrylyl-CoA (HOPAC) cycle, a new-to-nature CO2-fixation pathway that was designed through metabolic retrosynthesis around the reductive carboxylation of acrylyl-CoA, a highly efficient principle of CO2 fixation. We realized the HOPAC cycle in a step-wise fashion and used rational engineering approaches and machine learning-guided workflows to further optimize its output by more than one order of magnitude. Version 4.0 of the HOPAC cycle encompasses 11 enzymes from six different organisms, converting ~3.0 mM CO2 into glycolate within 2 hours. Our work moves the hypothetical HOPAC cycle from a theoretical design into an established in vitro system that forms the basis for different potential applications.

Authors

McLean R; Schwander T; Diehl C; Cortina NS; Paczia N; Zarzycki J; Erb TJ

Journal

Science Advances, Vol. 9, No. 24,

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication Date

June 16, 2023

DOI

10.1126/sciadv.adh4299

ISSN

2375-2548

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