American Association for the Advancement of Science, Science, 6562(373), p. 1489-1493, 2021
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Tracing a path to ethylene Ethylene is produced industrially from fossil carbon sources, but plants and microbes produce small amounts through a handful of unusual enzymatic reactions. Copeland et al . studied a microbial ethylene-forming enzyme using oxygen isotope–tracing experiments and biochemical assays to test mechanistic proposals. This enzyme, which uses a non–heme iron center to activate oxygen, catalyzes two distinct oxidation reactions with different mechanisms. One reaction is entirely off-pathway and results in fragmentation of a co-substrate, arginine. The other reaction can completely fragment 2-oxoglutarate into ethylene, bicarbonate, and two molecules of carbon dioxide; however, it occasionally derails and yields an omega–hydroxy acid product. —MAF