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  • Title: Assaying for the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle of carbon fixation.
    Author: Hügler M, Fuchs G.
    Journal: Methods Enzymol; 2005; 397():212-21. PubMed ID: 16260293.
    Abstract:
    The 3-hydroxypropionate cycle is a novel pathway for autotrophic CO2 fixation, which has been demonstrated in the thermophilic phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus; a yet to be defined variant of this pathway occurs in autotrophic members of the Sulfolobales (Crenarchaeota). The 3-hydroxypropionate cycle consists of the conversion of acetyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA, via malonyl-CoA, 3-hydroxypropionate, propionyl-CoA, and methylmalonyl-CoA. Carboxylation of acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA by acetyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA carboxylase are the CO2 fixation reactions. Succinyl-CoA serves as a precursor of cell carbon and also as a precursor of the starting compound acetyl-CoA. In C. aurantiacus, the cycle is completed by converting succinyl-CoA to malyl-CoA and cleaving malyl-CoA to acetyl-CoA and glyoxylate. Glyoxylate is then converted in a second cyclic pathway to pyruvate, which serves as a universal cell carbon precursor. The fate of succinyl-CoA in Sulfolobales is at issue. Assays used to study the characteristic enzymes of this novel pathway in C. aurantiacus are reported.
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