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Toward the Mechanistic Understanding of Enzymatic CO2 Reduction

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-10, 14:27 authored by Ana Rita Oliveira, Cristiano Mota, Cláudia Mourato, Renato M. Domingos, Marino F. A. Santos, Diana Gesto, Bruno Guigliarelli, Teresa Santos-Silva, Maria João Romão, Inês A. Cardoso Pereira
Reducing CO2 is a challenging chemical transformation that biology solves easily, with high efficiency and specificity. In particular, formate dehydrogenases are of great interest since they reduce CO2 to formate, a valuable chemical fuel and hydrogen storage compound. The metal-dependent formate dehydrogenases of prokaryotes can show high activity for CO2 reduction. Here, we report an expression system to produce recombinant W/Sec-FdhAB from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough fully loaded with cofactors, its catalytic characterization and crystal structures in oxidized and reduced states. The enzyme has very high activity for CO2 reduction and displays remarkable oxygen stability. The crystal structure of the formate-reduced enzyme shows Sec still coordinating the tungsten, supporting a mechanism of stable metal coordination during catalysis. Comparison of the oxidized and reduced structures shows significant changes close to the active site. The DvFdhAB is an excellent model for studying catalytic CO2 reduction and probing the mechanism of this conversion.

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