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Miniaturized hydrogen production

06.18.25 | Ruhr-University Bochum

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Shortcut to hydrogen production

Hydrogen is considered a clean energy carrier of the future, but it remains difficult to produce it sustainably. Natural enzymes known as hydrogenases are highly efficient, hydrogen-producing biocatalysts, but they are not yet being used industrially. With 600 amino acids, they are very large and complex, and often extremely sensitive to oxygen. They also require highly energetic electrons that should also be sustainably produced.

[FeFe]-hydrogenases use an iron-containing molecule to produce hydrogen. This cofactor functions similarly to a platinum catalyst and can be chemically synthesized. However, as an isolated molecule it is inert and requires the protein environment to achieve maximum effectiveness.

Simplifying the biocatalyst

The researchers from Ruhr University Bochum wanted to simplify the highly complex hydrogenase biocatalyst to facilitate its integration into industrial processes. In some microalgae, hydrogenases are supplied with electrons provided by photosynthesis. The small protein ferredoxin, which also contains iron, transfers the electrons. Ferredoxin itself receives the electrons directly from the photosynthetic electron transport chain.

“We asked the biologically somewhat crazy question of whether we can’t just find a shortcut and let ferredoxin produce hydrogen,” explains Vera Engelbrecht, one of the two lead authors of the study. To her great surprise, the researchers were able to identify ferredoxins that could produce hydrogen in combination with the hydrogenase cofactor. “However, we had to circumvent the biological synthesis pathways,” explains Yiting She, the other lead author. “Only specific ferredoxins could collaborate with the cofactor. It was a difficult but exciting journey to discover this.”

Successful interaction between protein and catalyst

The biohybrid’s high activity surprised the researchers. “We know that the interaction between protein and cofactor in natural [FeFe]-hydrogenases is finely tuned,” explains Professor Thomas Happe, who supervised the project. In cooperation with partners from the University of Potsdam, the new ferredoxin hydrogenase was therefore characterized spectroscopically and with quantum-mechanical calculations. “It seems that the ferredoxin protein provides a chemically favorable environment for the hydrogenase catalyst,” concludes Happe. In order to achieve this, the natural cofactor of the ferredoxin must be replaced with the hydrogenase cofactor via complex synthesis pathways. “Despite of this, the new protein can still receive electrons from photosynthesis components,” says Yiting She. This is thus an important feasibility study for a small, artificial metalloenzyme that imitates natural, light-powered hydrogenases but with fewer components and smaller scaffolds.

Advanced Science

10.1002/advs.202501897

Experimental study

Cells

Hydrogen Producing Catalysts Based on Ferredoxin Scaffolds

17-Jun-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Meike Driessen
Ruhr-University Bochum
meike.driessen@uv.rub.de

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Ruhr-University Bochum. (2025, June 18). Miniaturized hydrogen production. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOD6W2L/miniaturized-hydrogen-production.html
MLA:
"Miniaturized hydrogen production." Brightsurf News, Jun. 18 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOD6W2L/miniaturized-hydrogen-production.html.