Comparative biochemistry of CO2 fixation and the evolution of autotrophy
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Peretó, Juli; Velasco, Ana Maria; Becerra, Arturo; Lezcano, Antonio
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Aquest document és un/a article, creat/da en: 1999
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Carbon dioxide fixation is a polyphyletic trait that has evolved in widely
separated prokaryotic branches. The three principal CO2-assimilation pathways are
(i) the reductive pentose-phosphate cycle, i. e. the Calvin-Benson cycle; (ii) the
reductive citric acid (or Arnon) cycle; and (iii) the net synthesis of acetyl-CoA from
CO/CO2, or Wood pathway. Sequence analysis and the comparative biochemistry
of these routes suggest that all of them were shaped to a considerable extent by the
evolutionary recruitment of enzymes. Molecular phylogenetic trees show that the
Calvin-Benson cycle was a relatively late development in the (eu)bacterial branch,
suggesting that some form(s) of carbon assimilation may have been operative before
chlorophyll-based photosynthesis. On the other hand, the ample phylogenetic
distribution of both the Arnon and the Wood pathways does not allow us to infer
which one of them is older. However, different lines of evidence, including
experimental reports on the NiS/FeS-mediated C–C bond formation from CO and
CH3SH are used here to argue that the first CO2-fixation route may have been a semienzymatic
Wood-like pathway.
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