4.8 Article

Rational Design of a Miniature Photocatalytic CO2-Reducing Enzyme

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 5628-5635

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.1c00287

Keywords

photosystem I; rational design; photosensitizer protein; iron-sulfur (Fe4S4) cluster; photocatalytic; CO2 reductase

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFA0904101, 2019YFA0405600, 2017YFA0503704]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [21750003, 21890743, 21837005, 21825703, 21927814, U1732275]
  3. Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen [SZSM201811092]
  4. Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS
  5. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB37040000]
  6. Users with Excellence Program of Hefei Science Center, CAS [2019HSC-UE005]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

PSI is a large membrane protein complex essential for photosynthesis, but enhancing its functions through genetic engineering has been difficult due to complexity. mPCE, a miniature photocatalytic CO2-reducing enzyme, shows promise with high quantum efficiency and potential for high expression levels.
Photosystem I (PSI) is a very large membrane protein complex (similar to 1000 kDa) harboring P700*, the strongest reductant known in biological systems, which is responsible for driving NAD(P)(+) and ultimately for CO2 reduction. Although PSI is one of the most important components in the photosynthesis machinery, it has remained difficult to enhance PSI functions through genetic engineering due to its enormous complexity. Inspired by PSI's ability to undergo multiple-step photo-induced electron hopping from P700* to iron-sulfur [Fe4S4] clusters, we designed a 33 kDa miniature photocatalytic CO2-reducing enzyme (mPCE) harboring a chromophore (BpC) and two [Fe4S4] clusters (Fe-A/Fe-B). Through reduction potential fine-tuning, we optimized the multiple-step electron hopping from BpC to Fe-A/Fe-B, culminating in a CO2/HCOOH conversion quantum efficiency of 1.43%. As mPCE can be overexpressed with a high yield in Escherichia coli cells without requiring synthetic cofactors, further development along this route may result in rapid photo-enzyme quantum yield improvement and functional expansion through an efficient directed evolution process.

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