Nature Communications (Apr 2023)

Engineering α-carboxysomes into plant chloroplasts to support autotrophic photosynthesis

  • Taiyu Chen,
  • Marta Hojka,
  • Philip Davey,
  • Yaqi Sun,
  • Gregory F. Dykes,
  • Fei Zhou,
  • Tracy Lawson,
  • Peter J. Nixon,
  • Yongjun Lin,
  • Lu-Ning Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37490-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The growth in world population, climate change, and resource scarcity necessitate a sustainable increase in crop productivity. Photosynthesis in major crops is limited by the inefficiency of the key CO2-fixing enzyme Rubisco, owing to its low carboxylation rate and poor ability to discriminate between CO2 and O2. In cyanobacteria and proteobacteria, carboxysomes function as the central CO2-fixing organelles that elevate CO2 levels around encapsulated Rubisco to enhance carboxylation. There is growing interest in engineering carboxysomes into crop chloroplasts as a potential route for improving photosynthesis and crop yields. Here, we generate morphologically correct carboxysomes in tobacco chloroplasts by transforming nine carboxysome genetic components derived from a proteobacterium. The chloroplast-expressed carboxysomes display a structural and functional integrity comparable to native carboxysomes and support autotrophic growth and photosynthesis of the transplastomic plants at elevated CO2. Our study provides proof-of-concept for a route to engineering fully functional CO2-fixing modules and entire CO2-concentrating mechanisms into chloroplasts to improve crop photosynthesis and productivity.