Recapturing atmospheric CO2 is key to reducing global warming and increasing biological carbon availability. Ralstonia eutropha is a biotechnologically useful aerobic bacterium that uses the Calvin-Benson-Bassham ( CBB) cycle and the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubis CO) for CO2 utilization, suggesting that it may be a useful host to bioselect Rubis CO molecules with improved CO2-capture capabilities. A host strain of R. eutropha was constructed for this purpose after deleting endogenous genes encoding two related Rubis COs. This strain could be complemented for CO2-dependent growth by introducing native or heterologous Rubis CO genes. Mutagenesis and suppressor selection identified amino acid substitutions in a hydrophobic region that specifically influences Rubis CO's interaction with its substrates, particularly O2, which competes with CO2 at the active site. Unlike most Rubis COs, the R. eutropha enzyme has evolved to retain optimal CO2-fixation rates in a fast-growing host, despite the presence of high levels of competing O2. Yet its structure-function properties resemble those of several commonly found Rubis COs, including the higher plant enzymes, allowing strategies to engineer analogous enzymes. Because R. eutropha can be cultured rapidly under harsh environmental conditions (e.g., with toxic industrial flue gas), in the presence of near saturation levels of oxygen, artificial selection and directed evolution studies in this organism could potentially impact efforts toward improving Rubis CO-dependent biological CO2 utilization in aerobic environments. Enzymes d-ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, ; phosphoribulokinase [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]