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Journal ArticleDOI

Whole-cell biocatalysis for selective and productive C–O functional group introduction and modification

TLDR
This review focuses on highlighting the potentials, limitations, and solutions offered by the application of self-regenerating microbial cells as biocatalysts, especially in C-O functional group chemistry.
Abstract
During the last decades, biocatalysis became of increasing importance for chemical and pharmaceutical industries. Regarding regio- and stereospecificity, enzymes have shown to be superior compared to traditional chemical synthesis approaches, especially in C–O functional group chemistry. Catalysts established on a process level are diverse and can be classified along a functional continuum starting with single-step biotransformations using isolated enzymes or microbial strains towards fermentative processes with recombinant microorganisms containing artificial synthetic pathways. The complex organization of respective enzymes combined with aspects such as cofactor dependency and low stability in isolated form often favors the use of whole cells over that of isolated enzymes. Based on an inventory of the large spectrum of biocatalytic C–O functional group chemistry, this review focuses on highlighting the potentials, limitations, and solutions offered by the application of self-regenerating microbial cells as biocatalysts. Different cellular functionalities are discussed in the light of their (possible) contribution to catalyst efficiency. The combined achievements in the areas of protein, genetic, metabolic, and reaction engineering enable the development of whole-cell biocatalysts as powerful tools in organic synthesis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biocatalysis: Enzymatic Synthesis for Industrial Applications

TL;DR: A review of biocatalysis with a special focus on scalable chemical production using enzymes discusses the opportunities and limitations of enzymatic syntheses using distinct examples and provides an outlook on emerging enzyme classes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic biology for the directed evolution of protein biocatalysts: navigating sequence space intelligently

TL;DR: Improving enzymes by directed evolution requires the navigation of very large search spaces; this work surveys how to do this intelligently.

The future of metabolic engineering and synthetic biology: Towards a systematic practice

TL;DR: This work attempts to lay down a framework around which bioreaction engineering can systematize itself just like chemical reaction engineering, and introduces a new approach to engineering secondary metabolism known as 'multivariate modular metabolic engineering' (MMME), whose novelty lies in its assessment and elimination of regulatory and pathway bottlenecks by re-defining the metabolic network as a collection of distinct modules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous flow biocatalysis.

TL;DR: This Review explores continuous flow biocatalysts with emphasis on new technology, enzymes, whole cells, co-factor recycling, and immobilization methods for the synthesis of pharmaceuticals, value-added chemicals, and materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent Developments of Cascade Reactions Involving ω‑Transaminases

TL;DR: An overview of different biocatalytic strategies to afford a variety of (chiral) amines employing diverse cascade systems: Cascades to shift the reaction equilibrium as well as cascades for the amination of alcohols and nonactivated C–H bonds are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The synthesis of enzymes in bacteria follows a double genetic control, which appears to operate directly at the level of the synthesis by the gene of a shortlived intermediate, or messenger, which becomes associated with the ribosomes where protein synthesis takes place.
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Molecular Basis of Bacterial Outer Membrane Permeability Revisited

TL;DR: This review summarizes the development in the field since the previous review and begins to understand how this bilayer of the outer membrane can retard the entry of lipophilic compounds, owing to increasing knowledge about the chemistry of lipopolysaccharide from diverse organisms and the way in which lipopoly Saccharide structure is modified by environmental conditions.
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Production of the antimalarial drug precursor artemisinic acid in engineered yeast

TL;DR: The engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to produce high titres (up to 100 mg l-1) of artemisinic acid using an engineered mevalonate pathway, amorphadiene synthase, and a novel cytochrome P450 monooxygenase from A. annua that performs a three-step oxidation of amorpha-4,11-diene to art Artemisinic acid.
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Molecular basis of bacterial outer membrane permeability.

TL;DR: It is becoming increasingly clear that the outer membrane is very important in the physiology of gram-negative bacteria in making them resistant to host defense factors such as lysozyme, P-lysin, and various leukocyte proteins.
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Industrial biocatalysis today and tomorrow

TL;DR: Biocatalytic processes can now be carried out in organic solvents as well as aqueous environments, so that apolar organic compounds aswell as water-soluble compounds can be modified selectively and efficiently with enzymes and bioc atalytically active cells.
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