4.5 Review

Expanding P450 catalytic reaction space through evolution and engineering

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages 126-134

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2014.02.001

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Funding

  1. Jacobs Institute of Molecular Medicine at Caltech
  2. NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award [F32GM101792]
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  4. Office of Naval Research [N00014-11-1-0205]

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Advances in protein and metabolic engineering have led to wider use of enzymes to synthesize important molecules. However, many desirable transformations are not catalyzed by any known enzyme, driving interest in understanding how new enzymes can be created. The cytochrome P450 enzyme family, whose members participate in xenobiotic metabolism and natural products biosynthesis, catalyzes an impressive range of difficult chemical reactions that continues to grow as new enzymes are characterized. Recent work has revealed that P450-derived enzymes can also catalyze useful reactions previously accessible only to synthetic chemistry. The evolution and engineering of these enzymes provides an excellent case study for how to genetically encode new chemistry and expand biology's reaction space.

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