Bioconversion of the C1 compounds into value-added products is one of the CO2-reducing strategies. In particular, because CO2 can be easily converted into formate, the efficient and direct bioconversion of… Click to show full abstract
Bioconversion of the C1 compounds into value-added products is one of the CO2-reducing strategies. In particular, because CO2 can be easily converted into formate, the efficient and direct bioconversion of CO2 through formate assimilation is attracting attention. The tetrahydrofolate (THF) cycle is the highly efficient reconstructed formate assimilation pathway, and 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate cyclohydrolase (FchA) is an essential enzyme involved in the THF cycle. In this study, a kinetic analysis of FchA from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 (MeFchA) was performed and revealed that the enzyme has much higher cyclization than hydrolyzation activity, making it an optimal enzyme for formate assimilation. The crystal structure of MeFchA in the apo- and the THF-complexed forms was also determined, revealing that the substrate-binding site of the enzyme has three differently charged regions to stabilize the three differently charged moieties of the formyl-THF substrate. The residues involved in the substrate binding were also verified through site-directed mutagenesis. This study provides a biochemical and structural basis for the molecular mechanism underlying formate assimilation.
               
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