Rubisco and Crop Output

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== Function ==
== Function ==
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Rubisco or ribulose- 1,5- bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase is an enzyme that is involved in photosynthesis in plants and is specifically found in chloroplasts. (Harel, et. al) Rubisco is used in the light dependent part of the Calvin cycle. In this cycle, it catalyzes the most important step of carbon fixation. It converts atmospheric carbon dioxide into useable sugar. It does this by using carbon dioxide to make an intermediate, and then finally, 3-Phosphoglycerate. Most all of this 3-Phosphoglycerate is recycled and able to use again. It adds carbons to ribulose bisphosphate and then cleaves the 6 carbons into 2 chains with 3 carbons. Rubisco can also help to oxidize RuBP, a sugar.
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Rubisco or ribulose- 1,5- bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase is an enzyme that is involved in photosynthesis in plants and is specifically found in chloroplasts. (Harel, et. al) Rubisco is used in the light dependent part of the Calvin cycle. In this cycle, it catalyzes the first step of carbon fixation. It converts atmospheric carbon dioxide into useable sugar. It does this by using carbon dioxide to make an intermediate- an Enediolate intermediate, then a unstable intermediate, and then finally, 3-Phosphoglycerate. Most all of this 3-Phosphoglycerate is recycled and able to use again. It adds carbons to ribulose bisphosphate and then cleaves the 6 carbons into 2 chains with 3 carbons. Rubisco can also help to oxidize RuBP (Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate), a sugar.
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== Effect on Crop Output ==
== Effect on Crop Output ==
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Scientists can and have used Rubisco to make advances in plant technology. With the ever-changing problems going on in this world, some plant proteins can help change food scarcity. Some plant proteins, including Rubisco, can be even more useful and sustainable than proteins found in animals. It also has a lot of nutritional value, along with amino acids. For example, lysine is the most common amino acid found. Lysine may reduce anxiety by blocking stress response receptors, and it can also improve the absorption/retention of calcium. “Highly purified RuBisCO is a tasteless, odourless white powder with a nutritional value reported to be equal to or superior to that of other food proteins. RuBisCO also possesses some desirable functional properties which might enable food processors to successfully incorporate the protein into a number of different food products (desserts, composite meat products, ice cream, beverages). Further developments are to come to test RuBisCO into food systems such as desserts / yogurt for texturing and flavouring improvements.” (van de Velde, et. al)
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Scientists can and have used Rubisco to make advances in plant technology. With the ever-changing problems going on in this world, some plant proteins can help change food scarcity. Some plant proteins, including Rubisco, can be even more useful and sustainable than proteins found in animals. It also has a lot of nutritional value, along with amino acids. For example, lysine is the most common amino acid found. Lysine may reduce anxiety by blocking stress response receptors, and it can also improve the absorption/retention of calcium. “Highly purified Rubisco is a tasteless, odourless white powder with a nutritional value reported to be equal to or superior to that of other food proteins. Rubisco also possesses some desirable functional properties which might enable food processors to successfully incorporate the protein into a number of different food products (desserts, composite meat products, ice cream, beverages). Further developments are to come to test Rubisco into food systems such as desserts / yogurt for texturing and flavouring improvements.” (van de Velde, et. al)
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Rubisco makes up around 50% of the protein in plant leaves, which attributes to the green color plants give off. This is because of the very high chlorophyll content found within Rubisco. Since it makes up so much of the protein in the leaves, Rubisco is very important in nutrition and as an ingredient. “The protein is also attractive due to its high nutritional values and in vitro digestibility. Furthermore, RuBisCo is a competitive source of bioactive peptides with opioid‐like, memory‐enhancing, appetite‐stimulating, antioxidative, and antihypertensive properties, demonstrating the wide range of food applications where RuBisCo can be utilized.” (Stefano, et. al)
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== Problems ==
== Problems ==
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Rubisco is the most common protein in the world! Although this is true, just because it is the most abundant doesn’t mean it’s the most useful. Rubisco has some problems working correctly. Compared to other enzymes, the rate of the carboxylation reaction with Rubisco is 3 s-1. This is extremely slow. Another problem with Rubisco is that oxygen, as well as carbon dioxide, can fit into the binding site. This is because they both are similar in size and shape. It is difficult for Rubisco to distinguish which is which. (Goodsell) If this happens, and it does, phosphoglycolate can be made, and this is very toxic. This is Rubisco’s wasteful side chain reaction. To fix these mistakes, it is very costly to the plant, meaning, it costs ATP to fix this. Now the plant has to transport the glycolate across multiple membranes, losing Co2 and making more reactions occur. Depending on varying temperatures Rubisco is working with, its error rate can range from 20- 40%! (Alber, et. Al)
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Rubisco is the most common protein in the world! Although this is true, just because it is the most abundant doesn’t mean it’s the most useful. Rubisco has some problems working correctly. The rate of the carboxylation reaction with Rubisco is 3 s-1. This is extremely slow. Another problem with Rubisco is that oxygen, as well as carbon dioxide, can fit into the binding site. This is because they both are similar in size and shape. It is difficult for Rubisco to distinguish which is which. (Goodsell) If this happens, and it does, phosphoglycolate can be made, and this is very toxic. This is Rubisco’s wasteful side reaction. To fix these mistakes, is very costly to the plant, meaning, it costs ATP to fix this. Now the plant has to transport the glycolate across multiple membranes, losing CO and making more of these wasteful reactions occur. Depending on varying temperatures Rubisco is working with, its error rate can range from 20- 40%! (Alber, et. Al)
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Most plants are categorized into C3 and C4 plants. This is based off of the climate they are found in. C3 plants are more accustomed to cooler temperatures, as opposed to C4 plants that are found in warmer temperatures. <scene name='81/814059/Photorespiration/2'>Photorespiration</scene> is more likely to occur in C4 plants than C3 plants, because C4 plants are more accustomed to warmer temps. As temperatures begin to increase, so does photorespiration. Plants are more likely to dehydrate in the warm weather. This forces them to close the stomata in order to conserve water. When the plant closes the stomata, CO2 is prevented from entering the leaf. Photorespiration is when Rubisco binds O2 instead of CO2. This is contrary to the general pattern of photosynthesis, where Rubisco binds to CO2 instead of O2. Rubisco acts differently in C4 than C3 plants. To reduce photorespiration, C4 plants can “harvest” CO2 in bundle sheath cells. They also are useful at collecting carbon and using less water in warmer climates.
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Most plants are C3 or C4 plants. This is based off whether they use C3 or C4 intermediates. C3 plants are more accustomed to cooler temperatures, as opposed to C4 plants that are found in warmer temperatures. <scene name='81/814059/Photorespiration/2'>Photorespiration</scene> is more likely to occur in C4 plants than C3 plants, because C4 plants grow in warmer climates. As temperatures begin to increase, so does photorespiration. Plants are more likely to dehydrate in the warm weather. This forces them to close the stomata in order to conserve water. When the plant closes the stomata, CO2 is prevented from entering the leaf. Photorespiration is when Rubisco binds O2 instead of CO2. This is contrary to the general pattern of photosynthesis, where Rubisco binds to CO2 instead of O2. Rubisco acts differently in C4 than C3 plants. To reduce photorespiration, C4 plants can “harvest” CO2 in bundle sheath cells. They also are useful at collecting carbon and using less water in warmer climates.
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The major problem researchers have been working to change with Rubisco is the oxygenation instead of the carboxylation. The reason this is a problem is because the plant has to fix this, making this issue energetically unfavorable, by losing around 30% of the plants ATP in that step. When Rubisco binds oxygen instead, crop yield becomes lower, this is because it only makes half the product amount of 3-Phosphoglycerate. This limits how many times a plant can undergo the Calvin Cycle to make sugar. When temperatures begin to increase it is even more of an inconvenience and much more difficult for a plant to fix this problem. If we can fix this issue, Rubisco can not only be more successful with photosynthesis, but extremely successful with changing crop growth and quantity.
The major problem researchers have been working to change with Rubisco is the oxygenation instead of the carboxylation. The reason this is a problem is because the plant has to fix this, making this issue energetically unfavorable, by losing around 30% of the plants ATP in that step. When Rubisco binds oxygen instead, crop yield becomes lower, this is because it only makes half the product amount of 3-Phosphoglycerate. This limits how many times a plant can undergo the Calvin Cycle to make sugar. When temperatures begin to increase it is even more of an inconvenience and much more difficult for a plant to fix this problem. If we can fix this issue, Rubisco can not only be more successful with photosynthesis, but extremely successful with changing crop growth and quantity.

Revision as of 23:41, 29 April 2019

==Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')== Modifying Rubisco to Improve Crop Output

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References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
  3. 3.0 3.1 Sharwood RE. Engineering chloroplasts to improve Rubisco catalysis: prospects for translating improvements into food and fiber crops. New Phytol. 2017 Jan;213(2):494-510. doi: 10.1111/nph.14351. Epub 2016 Dec 9. PMID:27935049 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.14351

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Emily T. Frankenreiter, Michal Harel

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