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Ruhr-University Bochum researchers have analyzed how green algae manufacture complex components of a hydrogen-producing enzyme. The enzyme, known as the hydrogenase, may become relevant for the biotechnological commercial production of hydrogen.
Thomas Happe and Anne Sawyer search for efficient ways of biotechnologically producing hydrogen. Image Credit: Ruhr-University Bochum. © RUB, Kramer. Click image for the largest view.
So far, little is known about the way organisms form this type of hydrogenases under natural conditions. Using novel synthetic biology methods, the team around Dr. Anne Sawyer, PhD student Yu Bai, assistant professor Dr. Anja Hemschemeier and Prof Dr Thomas Happe from the Bochum-based research group Photobiotechnology, discovered that a specific protein machinery in the green algal chloroplasts is required for the production of a functional hydrogenase.
The researchers published their findings in The Plant Journal.
The team worked with the single-cell alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. These organisms have a specific protein machinery in different regions of the cells that assembles enzymes, for example in the photosynthesis-conducting chloroplasts and in the cell fluid, usually the cytoplasm.
One enzyme that requires such assembly is the HYDA1 enzyme, which contains a complex cofactor, which is the area inside the enzyme where the actual hydrogen production takes place. The cofactor consists of a cluster of four iron and four sulfur atoms; a configuration frequently found in enzymes. What is unusual, however, is that a second cluster of two additional iron atoms binds to it for the hydrogen catalysis.
Happe, Sawyer and their colleagues intended to identify the elements necessary for producing the cofactor in the living cell. They introduced hydrogenase precursors in different regions of the green algal cell, namely in the chloroplast and the cytoplasm. The protein machinery in the chloroplast was the only one capable of assembling a functioning hydrogenase. The machinery in the cytoplasm couldn’t produce the complex cofactor.
Then in a subsequent test, the researchers implanted the blueprint of a bacterial hydrogenase in the green algal genome. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii used it to produce a functional enzyme that efficiently generated hydrogen.
Professor Happe said, “Based on these findings, we can develop biotechnological methods, in order to achieve efficient hydrogen production in green algae. We now know that the machinery that assembles enzymes in the chloroplasts is unique and irreplaceable.”
For now this is basic research the enables greater understanding. What comes next is innovation and creativity to build better species for hydrogen production. We’ll be on the lookout, this information should have impacts pretty quickly.