PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

An ancient pathway combining carbon dioxide fixation with the generation and utilization of a sodium ion gradient for ATP synthesis.

  • Anja Poehlein,
  • Silke Schmidt,
  • Anne-Kristin Kaster,
  • Meike Goenrich,
  • John Vollmers,
  • Andrea Thürmer,
  • Johannes Bertsch,
  • Kai Schuchmann,
  • Birgit Voigt,
  • Michael Hecker,
  • Rolf Daniel,
  • Rudolf K Thauer,
  • Gerhard Gottschalk,
  • Volker Müller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. e33439

Abstract

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Synthesis of acetate from carbon dioxide and molecular hydrogen is considered to be the first carbon assimilation pathway on earth. It combines carbon dioxide fixation into acetyl-CoA with the production of ATP via an energized cell membrane. How the pathway is coupled with the net synthesis of ATP has been an enigma. The anaerobic, acetogenic bacterium Acetobacterium woodii uses an ancient version of this pathway without cytochromes and quinones. It generates a sodium ion potential across the cell membrane by the sodium-motive ferredoxin:NAD oxidoreductase (Rnf). The genome sequence of A. woodii solves the enigma: it uncovers Rnf as the only ion-motive enzyme coupled to the pathway and unravels a metabolism designed to produce reduced ferredoxin and overcome energetic barriers by virtue of electron-bifurcating, soluble enzymes.