The
initial stage of in vitro polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) polymerization
by PHA synthase from Ralstonia eutropha (PhaCRe) on a mica substrate in water was observed using
high-speed scanning atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM). Before PHA polymerization,
the adsorption–desorption cycle of the PhaCRe molecule
on mica was observed in real time. For approximately 30 s after the
addition of the PHA monomer, no significant change was observed on
the mica substrate, but PhaCRe could be transformed into
an active enzyme in water upon contact with the monomer during this
period. Subsequently, linearly elongating rod-shaped objects were
observed on the mica substrate, plausibly as a result of the polymerization
reaction. The height of these elongating objects was considerably
larger than the expected height for a single PHA chain. This observation
suggests that PHA chains generated during the reported experiments
might form some kind of a semiregular structure.