James Barrett, Mihris I. S. Naduthodi, Yuwei Mao, Clément Dégut, Sabina Musiał, Aidan Salter, Mark C. Leake, Michael J. Plevin, Alistair J. McCormick, James N. Blaza, Luke C. M. Mackinder
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A promiscuous mechanism to phase separate eukaryotic carbon fixation in the green lineage
CO2 fixation is commonly limited by inefficiency of the CO2-fixing enzyme Rubisco. Eukaryotic algae concentrate and fix CO2 in phase-separated condensates called pyrenoids, which complete up to one-third of global CO2 fixation. Condensation of Rubisco in pyrenoids is dependent on interaction with disordered linker proteins that show little conservation between species. We developed a sequence-independent bioinformatic pipeline to identify linker proteins in green algae. We report the linker from Chlorella and demonstrate that it binds a conserved site on the Rubisco large subunit. We show that the Chlorella linker phase separates Chlamydomonas Rubisco and that despite their separation by ~800 million years of evolution, the Chlorella linker can support the formation of a functional pyrenoid in Chlamydomonas. This cross-species reactivity extends to plants, with the Chlorella linker able to drive condensation of some native plant Rubiscos in vitro and in planta. Our results represent an exciting frontier for pyrenoid engineering in plants, which is modelled to increase crop yields. Barrett et al. identify a key Rubisco phase-separating protein in the CO2-fixing pyrenoid of Chlorella algae. This protein’s broad promiscuity for green lineage Rubiscos may aid in engineering CO2-supercharging pyrenoids in plants to boost yields.
期刊介绍:
Nature Plants is an online-only, monthly journal publishing the best research on plants — from their evolution, development, metabolism and environmental interactions to their societal significance.