Abstract
Autocatalytic mechanisms in carbon metabolism, such as the Calvin cycle, are responsible for the biological assimilation of CO2 to form organic compounds with complex structures, including sugars. Compounds that form C-C bonds with CO2 are regenerated in these autocatalytic reaction cycles, and the products are concurrently released. The formose reaction in basic aqueous solution has attracted attention as a nonbiological reaction involving an autocatalytic reaction cycle that non-enzymatically synthesizes sugars from the C1 compound formaldehyde. However, formaldehyde and sugars, which are the substrate and products of the formose reaction, respectively, are consumed in Cannizzaro reactions, particularly under basic aqueous conditions, which makes the formose reaction a fragile sugar-production system. Here, we constructed an autocatalytic reaction cycle for sugar synthesis under neutral conditions. We focused on the weak Brønsted basicity of oxometalate anions such as tungstates and molybdates as catalysts, thereby enabling the aldol reaction, retro-aldol reaction, and aldose-ketose transformation, which collectively constitute the autocatalytic reaction cycle. These bases acted on sugar molecules of substrates together with sodium ions of a Lewis acid to promote deprotonation under neutral conditions, which is the initiation step of the reactions forming an autocatalytic cycle, whereas the Cannizzaro reaction was inhibited. The autocatalytic reaction cycle established using this abiotic approach is a robust sugar production system. Furthermore, we found that the synthesized sugars work as energy storage substances that sustain microbial growth despite their absence in nature.
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