Chaperones for Climate Protection - The protein Rubisco locks up carbon dioxide / Biochemists synthesise Rubisco in the test tube for the first time

January 14, 2010

The World Climate Conference recently took place. Reports about carbon dioxide levels, rising temperatures and melting glaciers appeared daily. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute (MPI) of Biochemistry and the Gene Center of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich have now succeeded in rebuilding the enzyme Rubisco, the key protein in carbon dioxide fixation. “Rubisco is one of the most important proteins on the planet, yet despite this, it is also one of the most inefficient”, says Manajit Hayer-Hartl, a group leader at the MPI of Biochemistry. The researchers are now working on modifying the artificially produced Rubisco so that it will convert carbon dioxide more efficiently than the original protein. Their work has now been published in Nature.

Photosynthesis is one of the most important biological processes. Plants metabolize carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and sugar in the presence of light. Without this process, today’s life on earth would not be possible. The key protein of photosynthesis, called Rubisco, is thus one of the most important proteins in nature. It bonds with carbon dioxide and starts its conversion into sugar and oxygen. “But this process is really inefficient”, explains Manajit Hayer-Hartl. “Rubisco is not only reacting with carbon dioxide but also quite often with oxygen.” This did not cause any problems with the protein developed three billion years ago. Back then, there was no oxygen present in the atmosphere. However, as more and more oxygen accumulated, Rubisco could not adjust to this change.

The protein Rubisco is a large complex consisting of 16 subunits. Up to now, its complex structure made it impossible to reconstruct Rubisco in the laboratory. To overcome this obstacle, scientists at the MPI of Biochemistry and at the Gene Center of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich used the help of cellular chaperones. The French term chaperone describes a women who accompanies a young lady to a date and takes care that the young gentleman will not approach her protégé improperly.

The molecular chaperones within the cell work in a similar way: They ensure that only the correct parts of a newly synthesized protein will come together. As a result of this process, the protein acquires its correct three dimensional structure. “With 16 subunits like those of Rubisco, the risk is very high that wrong parts of the protein clump together and form useless aggregates,” says the biochemist. Only with its correct structure, Rubisco will be able to fulfill its function in plants.

The MPI researchers showed that two different chaperone systems, called GroEL and RbcX, are necessary to produce a functional Rubisco complex. The next aim of the scientists is to genetically modify Rubisco in a way that it bonds with carbon dioxide more often and metabolizes oxygen less frequently. “Because the modified Rubisco is predicted to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere more effectively,” says Manajit Hayer-Hartl, “it would enhance crop yields and could also be interesting for climate protection.”

Original Publication:

C. Liu, A. L. Young, A. Starling-Windhof, A. Bracher, S. Saschenbrecker, B. Vasudeva Rao, K. Vasudeva Rao, O. Berninghausen, T. Mielke, F. U. Hartl, R. Beckmann and M. Hayer-Hartl: Coupled chaperone action in folding and assembly of hexadecameric Rubisco. Nature, January 14, 2010.

Contact:

Dr. Manajit Hayer-Hartl

Chaperonin-assisted Protein Folding

Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

Am Klopferspitz 18

82152 Martinsried

mhartl@biochem.mpg.de

Anja Konschak

Public Relations

Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

Am Klopferspitz 18

82152 Martinsried

Phone ++49/89-8578-2824

E-mail: konschak@biochem.mpg.de

www.biochem.mpg.de

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