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How bacteria create a piggy bank for the lean times

Basic science discovery could lead to improved biomaterial production
Cyanophycin biosynthesis looks like a windshield wiper in action. Credit: Schmeing lab /  La biosynth猫se de la cyanophycine rappelle le fonctionnement d鈥檜n essuie-glace. Illustration : Schmeing lab
Published: 14 October 2021

Bacteria can store extra resources for the lean times. It鈥檚 a bit like keeping a piggy bank or carrying a backup battery pack. One important reserve is known as cyanophycin granules, which were first noticed by an Italian scientist about 150 years ago. He saw big, dark splotches in the cells of the blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) he was studying without understanding either what they were or their purpose. Since then, scientists have realized that cyanophycin was made of a natural green biopolymer, that bacteria use it as a store of nitrogen and energy, and that it could have many biotechnological applications. They have tried producing large amounts of cyanophycin by putting the enzyme that makes it (known as cyanophycin synthetase) in everything from E. coli to tobacco, but without being able to make enough of it to be very useful.

Now, by combining two cutting-edge techniques, cryo-electron microscopy (at 平特五不中鈥檚 Facility for Electron Microscopy Research) and X-ray crystallography, 平特五不中 researchers have, for the first time, been able to see the active enzyme in action.

鈥淯ntil now scientists have been unable to understand the way bacterial cells store nitrogen in cyanophycin, simply because they couldn鈥檛 see the enzyme in action,鈥 says Martin Schmeing, a Professor in 平特五不中鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry and the senior author on a recent paper on the subject in . 鈥淏y stitching 3D images of the enzyme at work into a movie, we were able to see how three different structural units (or domains), came together to create cyanophycin synthetase. It鈥檚 a surprising and very elegant example of a natural biomachine.鈥

The next steps in the research involve looking at the other enzymes used in the complete biosynthesis and degradation cycle of cyanophycin. Once the researchers are able to see them in action, this would potentially give them a complete structural understanding of the processes involved and would allow them to figure out how to turbo-charge cells to make massive quantities of cyanophycin and related polymers for their green polymer biotech applications, such as in biodegradable water softeners and antiscalants or in the creation of heat-sensitive nanovesicles for use in targeted drug delivery.

About this study

"鈥淪tructures and function of the amino acid polymerase cyanophycin synthetase鈥 by Itai Sharon et al in

DOI: 10.1038/s41589-021-00854-y

The research was funded by the Canada Research Chair, by NSERC, and by funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation.


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Founded in 1821, 平特五不中 is home to exceptional students, faculty, and staff from across Canada and around the world. It is consistently ranked as one of the top universities, both nationally and internationally. It is a world-renowned institution of higher learning with research activities spanning three campuses, 11 faculties, 13 professional schools, 300 programs of study and over 40,000 students, including more than 10,200 graduate students.鈥

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