Where Chemocatalysis Meets Biocatalysis: In Water.

Chem Rev

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Barbara, California93106, United States.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemoenzymatic catalysis merges chemocatalysis and biocatalysis in one pot, typically using water as the reaction medium, which offers advantages like cost-effectiveness and eco-friendliness.
  • The text discusses the challenges of combining these two methods, as chemocatalysis often occurs in organic solvents that can deactivate enzymes, but presents innovative solutions to enable their integration in water.
  • The information is organized into three main parts: historical context, key developments in the field, and recent advancements, concluding with an overview of current challenges and future prospects in chemoenzymatic catalysis.

Article Abstract

Chemoenzymatic catalysis, by definition, involves the merging of sequential reactions using both chemocatalysis and biocatalysis, typically in a single reaction vessel. A major challenge, the solution to which, however, is associated with numerous advantages, is to run such one-pot processes in water: the majority of enzyme-catalyzed processes take place in water as Nature's reaction medium, thus enabling a broad synthetic diversity when using water due to the option to use virtually all types of enzymes. Furthermore, water is cheap, abundantly available, and environmentally friendly, thus making it, in principle, an ideal reaction medium. On the other hand, most chemocatalysis is routinely performed today in organic solvents (which might deactivate enzymes), thus appearing to make it difficult to combine such reactions with biocatalysis toward one-pot cascades in water. Several creative approaches and solutions that enable such combinations of chemo- and biocatalysis in water to be realized and applied to synthetic problems are presented herein, reflecting the state-of-the-art in this blossoming field. Coverage has been sectioned into three parts, after introductory remarks: (1) Chapter 2 focuses on historical developments that initiated this area of research; (2) Chapter 3 describes key developments post-initial discoveries that have advanced this field; and (3) Chapter 4 highlights the latest achievements that provide attractive solutions to the main question of between biocatalysis (used predominantly in aqueous media) and chemocatalysis (that remains predominantly performed in organic solvents), both Chapters covering mainly literature from 2018 to the present. Chapters 5 and 6 provide a brief overview as to where the field stands, the challenges that lie ahead, and ultimately, the prognosis looking toward the future of chemoenzymatic catalysis in organic synthesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrev.2c00416DOI Listing

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