Nitrogenase is an ATP-requiring enzyme capable of carrying out multielectron reductions of inert molecules. A purified remodeled nitrogenase containing two amino acid substitutions near the site of its FeMo cofactor was recently described as having the capacity to reduce carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) to methane (CH 4 ). Here, we developed the anoxygenic phototroph, Rhodopseudomonas palustris, as a biocatalyst capable of light-driven CO 2 reduction to CH 4 in vivo using this remodeled nitrogenase. Conversion of CO 2 to CH 4 by R. palustris required constitutive expression of nitrogenase, which was achieved by using a variant of the transcription factor NifA that is able to activate expression of nitrogenase under all growth conditions. Also, light was required for generation of ATP by cyclic photophosphorylation. CH 4 production by R. palustris could be controlled by manipulating the distribution of electrons and energy available to nitrogenase. This work shows the feasibility of using microbes to generate hydrocarbons from CO 2 in one enzymatic step using light energy.A n essential process for life and an important step in the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle is nitrogen fixation by nitrogenase, in which nitrogen gas (N 2 ) is converted to ammonia (NH 3 ) (1). The difficult reduction of N 2 to two NH 3 occurs at an FeMoS cluster called FeMo cofactor in Mo-dependent nitrogenase in a reaction that requires ATP hydrolysis and dihydrogen production as shown in 1Nitrogenase deprived of access to N 2 but provided with a source of electrons produces H 2 exclusively. Also, the ability of nitrogenase to carry out the multielectron reduction of an inert molecule is not limited to reduction of N 2 . This enzyme can also reduce other molecules with double and triple bonds, including carboncontaining compounds (reviewed in ref.2). Recently, we found that a remodeled nitrogenase with substitutions in two key amino acids near the FeMo cofactor is capable of reducing carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) to methane (CH 4 ) in vitro. This enzyme did not retain its ability to reduce N 2 but was active in H 2 production (3). It was unclear if the remodeled nitrogenase gene could confer to bacteria the ability to reduce CO 2 to CH 4 . Here, we describe a biocatalyst capable of generating the energyrich hydrocarbon CH 4 by reduction of CO 2 using a remodeled nitrogenase. Development of this biocatalyst required selection of an appropriate microbial host, because large amounts of cellular reductant and ATP are used by nitrogenase, and as a consequence, this energetically expensive enzyme is repressed by both transcriptional and posttranslational regulatory mechanisms when an alternative nitrogen source, like ammonium, is available (4). Use of nitrogenase to generate a product not used by the organism would require overcoming these regulatory constraints to achieve expression of active enzyme, while at the same time providing cells with ammonium for growth. We reasoned that the anoxygenic photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris would be a good ch...