作者
Luke CM Mackinder, Moritz T Meyer, Tabea Mettler-Altmann, Vivian K Chen, Madeline C Mitchell, Oliver Caspari, Elizabeth S Freeman Rosenzweig, Leif Pallesen, Gregory Reeves, Alan Itakura, Robyn Roth, Frederik Sommer, Stefan Geimer, Timo Mühlhaus, Michael Schroda, Ursula Goodenough, Mark Stitt, Howard Griffiths, Martin C Jonikas
发表日期
2016/5/24
期刊
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
卷号
113
期号
21
页码范围
5958-5963
出版商
National Academy of Sciences
简介
Biological carbon fixation is a key step in the global carbon cycle that regulates the atmosphere's composition while producing the food we eat and the fuels we burn. Approximately one-third of global carbon fixation occurs in an overlooked algal organelle called the pyrenoid. The pyrenoid contains the CO2-fixing enzyme Rubisco and enhances carbon fixation by supplying Rubisco with a high concentration of CO2. Since the discovery of the pyrenoid more that 130 y ago, the molecular structure and biogenesis of this ecologically fundamental organelle have remained enigmatic. Here we use the model green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to discover that a low-complexity repeat protein, Essential Pyrenoid Component 1 (EPYC1), links Rubisco to form the pyrenoid. We find that EPYC1 is of comparable abundance to Rubisco and colocalizes with Rubisco throughout the pyrenoid. We show that EPYC1 is essential …
引用总数
20162017201820192020202120222023202422321273430324014
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LCM Mackinder, MT Meyer, T Mettler-Altmann… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016