Faculty of Science
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Biocompatible Artificial Metalloenzymes

Merging organometallic chemistry with biotechnology


Artificial metalloenzymes


Organometallic- and enzymatic catalysis have evolved independently over the past four decades. In many respects, these approaches can be viewed as complementary. By incorporating an organometallic moiety within a protein host, we create artificial metallo-enzymes, with properties reminiscent both of homogeneous and enzymatic catalysis. The main focus of our research is to exploit such hybrid systems towards various applications.

  • Enantioselective catalysis (white biotechnology)
  • Synthetic biology (metabolic engineering)
  • Bio-nanotechnology


In order to ensure unambiguous localisation of the organometallic moiety within the host protein, we rely on various anchoring strategies.

  • Covalent anchoring exploiting carbonic anhydrase as scaffold
  • Supramolecular anchoring exploiting the biotin-streptavidin couple
  • Dative anchoring upon repurposing proteins with latent facial triad motifs


Basic concept


In the spirit of E. Fischer's Lock and Key. The anchor (red; for example biotin) displays a very high affinity for the host protein (brown; for example streptavidin (Ka 1014 M–1)). A catalytically competent organometallic moiety (green), linked via a spacer (blue) to biotin is combined with streptavidin to yield an artificial metalloenzyme. A broadly applicable chemogenetic optimization strategy relies on

i) mutations (*) on streptavidin and

ii) variation of the spacer and the bidentate ligand


This strategy can be applied to any host protein-cofactor couple.


The chemogenetic optimisation strategy combines random mutagenesis (the rows) of the host protein with chemical variation of the anchored cofactor (the columns). After screening various spacers and ligands, a directed evolution protocol allows to screen thousands of mutants with the selected cofactor to identify versatile artificial metalloenzyme.


A Mosaic of applications


Reactions Implemented

  • Hydrogenation
  • Transfer hydrogenation
  • Ketones, enones, imines, NAD(P)+
  • Allylic substitution
  • C-H activation
  • Suzuki cross-coupling
  • Metathesis
  • Alcohol oxidation
  • Sulfoxidation
  • Dihydroxylation
  • Peroxidation
  • Michael addition
  • Enzyme cascades
  • DNA recognition


Current

  • In vivo catalysis
  • Directed evolution
  • Alternative metabolism
  • Cross-regulation
  • Off-equilibrium thermodynamics
  • Catalytic drugs
  • Biofuels
  • Multi-electron processes
  • Artificial photosynthesis


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