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Four amino acids define the CO <sub>2</sub> binding pocket of enoyl-CoA carboxylases/reductases

64

Citations

24

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Carboxylases are biocatalysts that capture and convert carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) under mild conditions and atmospheric concentrations at a scale of more than 400 Gt annually. However, how these enzymes bind and control the gaseous CO<sub>2</sub> molecule during catalysis is only poorly understood. One of the most efficient classes of carboxylating enzymes are enoyl-CoA carboxylases/reductases (Ecrs), which outcompete the plant enzyme RuBisCO in catalytic efficiency and fidelity by more than an order of magnitude. Here we investigated the interactions of CO<sub>2</sub> within the active site of Ecr from <i>Kitasatospora setae</i> Combining experimental biochemistry, protein crystallography, and advanced computer simulations we show that 4 amino acids, N81, F170, E171, and H365, are required to create a highly efficient CO<sub>2</sub>-fixing enzyme. Together, these 4 residues anchor and position the CO<sub>2</sub> molecule for the attack by a reactive enolate created during the catalytic cycle. Notably, a highly ordered water molecule plays an important role in an active site that is otherwise carefully shielded from water, which is detrimental to CO<sub>2</sub> fixation. Altogether, our study reveals unprecedented molecular details of selective CO<sub>2</sub> binding and C-C-bond formation during the catalytic cycle of nature's most efficient CO<sub>2</sub>-fixing enzyme. This knowledge provides the basis for the future development of catalytic frameworks for the capture and conversion of CO<sub>2</sub> in biology and chemistry.

References

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