Finn Michael W, Tabita F Robert
Department of Microbiology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1292, USA.
J Bacteriol. 2003 May;185(10):3049-59. doi: 10.1128/JB.185.10.3049-3059.2003.
Ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) catalyzes the biological reduction and assimilation of carbon dioxide gas to organic carbon; it is the key enzyme responsible for the bulk of organic matter found on earth. Until recently it was believed that there are only two forms of RubisCO, form I and form II. However, the recent completion of several genome-sequencing projects uncovered open reading frames resembling RubisCO in the third domain of life, the archaea. Previous work and homology comparisons suggest that these enzymes represent a third form of RubisCO, form III. While earlier work indicated that two structurally distinct recombinant archaeal RubisCO proteins catalyzed bona fide RubisCO reactions, it was not established that the rbcL genes of anaerobic archaea can be transcribed and translated to an active enzyme in the native organisms. In this report, it is shown not only that Methanococcus jannaschii, Archaeoglobus fulgidus, Methanosarcina acetivorans, and Methanosarcina barkeri possess open reading frames with the residues required for catalysis but also that the RubisCO protein from these archaea accumulates in an active form under normal growth conditions. In addition, the form III RubisCO gene (rbcL) from M. acetivorans was shown to complement RubisCO deletion strains of Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides under both photoheterotrophic and photoautotrophic growth conditions. These studies thus indicate for the first time that archaeal form III RubisCO functions in a physiologically significant fashion to fix CO(2). Furthermore, recombinant M. jannaschii, M. acetivorans, and A. fulgidus RubisCO possess unique properties with respect to quaternary structure, temperature optima, and activity in the presence of molecular oxygen compared to the previously described Thermococcus kodakaraensis and halophile proteins.
1,5 - 二磷酸核酮糖羧化酶/加氧酶(RubisCO)催化二氧化碳气体生物还原并同化为有机碳;它是地球上大部分有机物质形成的关键酶。直到最近,人们一直认为RubisCO只有两种形式,即I型和II型。然而,最近几个基因组测序项目的完成揭示了在生命的第三个领域——古菌中存在与RubisCO相似的开放阅读框。先前的研究工作和同源性比较表明,这些酶代表了RubisCO的第三种形式,即III型。虽然早期的研究表明两种结构不同的重组古菌RubisCO蛋白能催化真正的RubisCO反应,但尚未确定厌氧古菌的rbcL基因在天然生物体中能否转录并翻译为活性酶。在本报告中,不仅表明詹氏甲烷球菌、嗜热栖热菌、嗜乙酰甲烷八叠球菌和巴氏甲烷八叠球菌拥有具有催化所需残基的开放阅读框,还表明这些古菌的RubisCO蛋白在正常生长条件下以活性形式积累。此外,嗜乙酰甲烷八叠球菌的III型RubisCO基因(rbcL)在光异养和光自养生长条件下均能互补荚膜红细菌和球形红细菌的RubisCO缺失菌株。因此,这些研究首次表明古菌III型RubisCO在生理上以重要方式发挥固定CO₂的功能。此外,与先前描述的柯达嗜热栖热菌和嗜盐菌蛋白相比,重组詹氏甲烷球菌、嗜乙酰甲烷八叠球菌和嗜热栖热菌RubisCO在四级结构、最适温度和分子氧存在下的活性方面具有独特性质。