Rubisco and Crop Output

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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. 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. <ref name="Goodsell">Goodsell, David S. “PDB101: Molecule of the Month: Rubisco.” RCSB, Nov. 2000,</ref>
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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. 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%! <ref name="Alber">Alber, Birgit., et. al “A Short History of RubisCO: the Rise and Fall (?) of Nature's Predominant CO2 Fixing Enzyme.” Current Opinion in Biotechnology, Elsevier Current Trends, 29 Aug. 2017,</ref>
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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%! <ref name="Alber">Alber, Birgit., et. al “A Short History of RubisCO: the Rise and Fall (?) of Nature's Predominant CO2 Fixing Enzyme.” Current Opinion in Biotechnology, Elsevier Current Trends, 29 Aug. 2017,</ref>
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Revision as of 03:36, 3 May 2019

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Andersson I. Large structures at high resolution: the 1.6 A crystal structure of spinach ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase complexed with 2-carboxyarabinitol bisphosphate. J Mol Biol. 1996 May 31;259(1):160-74. PMID:8648644 doi:10.1006/jmbi.1996.0310
  2. Portis AR Jr. Rubisco activase - Rubisco's catalytic chaperone. Photosynth Res. 2003;75(1):11-27. doi: 10.1023/A:1022458108678. PMID:16245090 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1022458108678
  3. Alber, Birgit., et. al “A Short History of RubisCO: the Rise and Fall (?) of Nature's Predominant CO2 Fixing Enzyme.” Current Opinion in Biotechnology, Elsevier Current Trends, 29 Aug. 2017,
  4. 4.0 4.1 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
  5. Carmo-Silva E, Scales JC, Madgwick PJ, Parry MA. Optimizing Rubisco and its regulation for greater resource use efficiency. Plant Cell Environ. 2015 Sep;38(9):1817-32. doi: 10.1111/pce.12425. Epub 2014 Sep, 26. PMID:25123951 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pce.12425
  6. 6.0 6.1 PMID: 23417088

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