“…To enable a complete transition to autotrophy, the host must (1) operate CO 2 fixation machinery in a pathway where the carbon input is comprised solely of CO 2 , while the outputs are organic molecules that enter central carbon metabolism and supply all 12 essential biomass precursors of the cell (Nielsen and Keasling, 2016); (2) express enzymatic machinery to obtain reducing power, either by harvesting non-chemical energy (light, electricity, etc.) or by oxidizing a reduced chemical compound that does not serve as a carbon source; and (3) regulate and coordinate the energy-harvesting and CO 2 -fixation pathways so that they together support steady-state growth with CO 2 as the sole source of carbon (Barenholz et al., 2017). Previous attempts (Mattozzi et al., 2013, Antonovsky et al., 2016, Schada von Borzyskowski et al., 2018) to establish autocatalytic CO 2 fixation cycles in model heterotrophs required the addition of multi-carbon organic compounds, which served, at least partially, as a carbon source, in order to achieve stable growth.…”