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Biocatalysis harnesses enzymes to make valuable products. This green technology is used in countless applications from bench scale to industrial production and allows practitioners to access complex organic molecules, often with fewer synthetic steps and reduced waste. The last decade has seen an explosion in the development of experimental and computational tools to tailor enzymatic properties, equipping enzyme engineers with the ability to create biocatalysts that perform reactions not present in nature. By using (chemo)-enzymatic synthesis routes or orchestrating intricate enzyme cascades, scientists can synthesize elaborate targets ranging from DNA and complex pharmaceuticals to starch made in vitro from CO2-derived methanol. In addition, new chemistries have emerged through the combination of biocatalysis with transition metal catalysis, photocatalysis, and electrocatalysis. This review highlights recent key developments, identifies current limitations, and provides a future prospect for this rapidly developing technology.
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Rebecca Buller
University of Bern
Stefan Lutz
Emory University
Romas J. Kazlauskas
Biotechnology Institute
Science
Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)
Novartis (Switzerland)
Universität Greifswald
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Buller et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7d8405c3030ff03d17d2c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adh8615
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