Carbon fixation is the most important biological processes on earth, supporting our biosphere by transforming inorganic carbon into organic matter and literally feeding all life forms. The Calvin–Benson–Bassham Cycle (CBBC or Calvin cycle) – operating in higher plants, algae, and many bacteria – is responsible for ≥ 95% of the carbon fixed in the biosphere. Despite being under a strong selective pressure for eons, the Calvin cycle still displays inefficiencies related to the enzymes it employs; especially one of its key enzymes, the carboxylating enzyme RuBisCO, is inefficient. RuBisCO is very slow and cannot fully distinguish between CO2 and molecular oxygen. When oxygen replaces CO2 as substrate for RuBisCO’s activity, a toxic waste product, 2-phosphoglycolate (2PG), is produced. 2PG must be recycled back into the Calvin cycle via a process termed photorespiration. However, plant photorespiration dissipates energy and releases CO2, thereby directly counteracting the function of RuBisCO, reducing the effective rate of carbon fixation, and lowering agricultural productivity.
FutureAgriculture aims to boost agricultural productivity by designing and engineering plants that directly overcome the deficits of natural photorespiration and that support higher photosynthetic rate and yield. Alternative metabolic pathways that can bypass photorespiration without releasing CO2 are screened in silico by taking into account all known enzymes, as well as enzymes that could be easily evolved from them. The synthetic enzymes are integrated with existing ones to obtain entirely new pathways optimized by chemical logic, which will, in turn, be realized in vitro and then in vivo within bacteria and plants. Their implementation in plants is expected to significantly increase plant growth rate and biomass yield under various environmental conditions. This will provide the basis for increasing agricultural productivity of the crops that comprise >60% of agricultural production, including rice, wheat, barley, oat, soybean, cotton, and potato.