The limits to biocatalysis: pushing the envelope
文献情報
Roger A. Sheldon, Dean Brady
In the period 1985 to 1995 applications of biocatalysis, driven by the need for more sustainable manufacture of chemicals and catalytic, (enantio)selective methods for the synthesis of pharmaceutical intermediates, largely involved the available hydrolases. This was followed, in the next two decades, by revolutionary developments in protein engineering and directed evolution for the optimisation of enzyme function and performance that totally changed the biocatalysis landscape. In the same period, metabolic engineering and synthetic biology revolutionised the use of whole cell biocatalysis in the synthesis of commodity chemicals by fermentation. In particular, developments in the enzymatic enantioselective synthesis of chiral alcohols and amines are highlighted. Progress in enzyme immobilisation facilitated applications under harsh industrial conditions, such as in organic solvents. The emergence of biocatalytic or chemoenzymatic cascade processes, often with co-immobilised enzymes, has enabled telescoping of multi-step processes. Discovering and inventing new biocatalytic processes, based on (meta)genomic sequencing, evolving enzyme promiscuity, chemomimetic biocatalysis, artificial metalloenzymes, and the introduction of non-canonical amino acids into proteins, are pushing back the limits of biocatalysis function. Finally, the integral role of biocatalysis in developing a biobased carbon-neutral economy is discussed.
おすすめジャーナル
関連文献
IF 6.843
A model-based comparison of Ru and Ni catalysts for the Sabatier reactionIF 6.367
PEST (political, environmental, social & technical) analysis of the development of the waste-to-energy anaerobic digestion industry in China as a representative for developing countriesIF 6.367
Contents listIF 6.843
Catalogue of self-targeting nano-medical inventions to accelerate clinical trialsIF 6.843
Performance of electrode-supported silica membrane separators in lithium-ion batteriesIF 6.367
MnO/C cubo-polyhedrons derived from α-MnO2@ZIF-8 as anode materials for high-performance lithium-ion batteriesIF 6.367
In situ growth of all-inorganic perovskite nanocrystals on black phosphorus nanosheetsIF 6.222
Insights into the mechanism of photosynthetic H2 evolution catalyzed by a heptacoordinate cobalt complexIF 6.367
Transition-metal-free insertion reactions of alkynes into the C–N σ-bonds of imides: synthesis of substituted enamides or chromonesIF 6.222
掲載誌
Chemical Communications

ChemComm publishes urgent research which is of outstanding significance and interest to experts in the field, while also appealing to the journal’s broad chemistry readership. Our communication format is ideally suited to short, urgent studies that are of such importance that they require accelerated publication. Our scope covers all topics in chemistry, and research at the interface of chemistry and other disciplines (such as materials science, nanoscience, physics, engineering and biology) where there is a significant novelty in the chemistry aspects. Major topic areas covered include: Analytical Chemistry Catalysis Chemical Biology and medicinal chemistry Computational Chemistry and Machine Learning Energy and sustainable chemistry Environmental Chemistry Green Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry Materials Chemistry Nanoscience Organic Chemistry Physical Chemistry Polymer Chemistry Supramolecular Chemistry