2 publications
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Iron-porphyrin Catalyzed Carbene Transfer Reactions – an Evolution fro Biomimetic Catalysis towards Chemistry-inspired Non-natural Reactivities of Enzymes
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ChemCatChem 2020, 10.1002/cctc.201901565
Bioinspired, synthetic porphyrin complexes are important catalysts in organic synthesis and play a pivotal role in efficient carbene transfer reactions. The advances in this research area stimulated recent, “chemo‐inspired” developments in biocatalysis. Today, both synthetic iron complexes and enzymes play an important role to conduct carbene transfer reactions. The advances and potential developments in both research areas are discussed in this concept article.
Metal: FeLigand type: PorphyrinHost protein: ---Anchoring strategy: ---Optimization: Chemical & geneticNotes: ---
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Site‐Selective Functionalization of (sp3)C-H Bonds Catalyzed by Artificial Metalloenzymes Containing an Iridium‐Porphyrin Cofactor
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Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2019, 58, 13954-13960, 10.1002/anie.201907460
The selective functionalization of one C-H bond over others in nearly identical steric and electronic environments can facilitate the construction of complex molecules. We report site-selective functionalizations of C-H bonds, differentiated solely by remote substituents, catalyzed by artificial metalloenzymes (ArMs) that are generated from the combination of an evolvable P450 scaffold and an iridium-porphyrin cofactor. The generated systems catalyze the insertion of carbenes into the C-H bonds of arange of phthalan derivatives containing substituents that render the two methylene positions in each phthalan inequivalent. These reactions occur with site-selectivity ratios of up to 17.8:1 and, in most cases, with pairs of enzyme mutants that preferentially form each of the two constitutional isomers. This study demonstrates the potential of abiotic reactions catalyzed by metalloenzymes to functionalize C-H bonds with site selectivity that is difficult to achieve with small-molecule catalysts.
Metal: IrLigand type: PorphyrinHost protein: Cytochrome P450 (CYP119)Anchoring strategy: ReconstitutionOptimization: GeneticNotes: ---