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Formate dehydrogenase reduces carbon dioxide to formic acid

Published on May 14, 2020

Research

Download the press release in PDF

In a Glance

-?The group clarified for the first time whether formate dehydrogenase reduces carbon dioxide, biocarbonate ion, or carbonate ion to formic acid.
- Points to a catalyst in developing and designing an artificial photosynthesis system that efficiently converts carbon dioxide into organic molecules.

Research Overview

Professor Yutaka Amao of the Osaka City University Artificial Photosynthesis Research Center and Ryohei Sato, a 1st year Ph.D. student of the Graduate School of Science majoring in Physics and Chemistry, reveal that the catalyst formate dehydrogenase reduces carbon dioxide directly to formic acid.

Press-Figure-1.jpgThe development of an effective catalyst is an important step in creating an artificial photosynthesis system that uses sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into organic molecules. Formate dehydrogenase (FDH) is a catalyst that accelerates the reaction of converting carbon dioxide (CO2) into formic acid (hydrogen energy storage medium etc.) However, until now the details of how this happened were unclear. The research group dissolved FDH in a liquid solution and carbon dioxide was then blown into the solution for the reaction event.

?The results of this research were published in the "New Journal of Chemistry" published by the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC).

【Published in】?? New Journal of Chemistry (Published be The Royal Society of Chemistry)
?【Online Publish Date】May 1, 2020
【Title】Can formate dehydrogenase from Candida boidinii catalytically reduce carbon dioxide, bicarbonate, or carbonate to formate?
【Authors】? ? ? ? ? Ryohei Sato, Yutaka Amao
【Article URL】???? DOI: 10.1039/D0NJ01183E

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