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Protein stoichiometry, structural plasticity and regulation of bacterial microcompartments

Lu‐Ning Liu, Mengru Yang, Yaqi Sun, Jing Yang

2021Current Opinion in Microbiology44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are self-assembling prokaryotic organelles consisting of a polyhedral proteinaceous shell and encapsulated enzymes that are involved in CO2 fixation or carbon catabolism. Addressing how the hundreds of building components self-assemble to form the metabolically functional organelles and how their structures and functions are modulated in the extremely dynamic bacterial cytoplasm is of importance for basic understanding of protein organelle formation and synthetic engineering of metabolic modules for biotechnological applications. Here, we highlight recent advances in understanding the protein composition and stoichiometry of BMCs, with a particular focus on carboxysomes and propanediol utilization microcompartments. We also discuss relevant research on the structural plasticity of native and engineered BMCs, and the physiological regulation of BMC assembly, function and positioning in native hosts.

Topics & Concepts

OrganelleBiologyStructural plasticityCytoplasmFunction (biology)CatabolismSynthetic biologyCell biologyBiochemistryComputational biologyMetabolismNeurosciencePhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsEnzyme Structure and FunctionProtein Structure and Dynamics