Artificial metalloenzymes for enantioselective catalysis : the phenomenon of protein accelerated catalysis
Author(s)
Collot, Jérôme
Humbert, Nicolas
Skander, Myriem
Klein, Gérard
Ward, Thomas R.
Date issued
December 6, 2004
In
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry, 2005/689/4868-4871
Subjects
Biotin–avidin Streptavidin Enantioselective catalysis Second coordination sphere Hydrogenation Artificial metalloenzyme Bioinorganic chemistry Protein-accelerated catalysis
Abstract
We report on the phenomenon of protein-accelerated catalysis in the field of artificial metalloenzymes based on the non-covalent incorporation of biotinylated rhodium–diphosphine complexes in (strept)avidin as host proteins. By incrementally varying the [Rh(COD)(Biot-1)]<sup>+</sup> vs. (strept)avidin ratio, we show that the enantiomeric excess of the produced acetamidoalanine decreases slowly. This suggests that the catalyst inside (strept)avidin is more active than the catalyst outside the host protein. Both avidin and streptavidin display protein-accelerated catalysis as the protein embedded catalyst display 12.0- and 3.0-fold acceleration over the background reaction with a catalyst devoid of protein. Thus, these artificial metalloenzymes display an increase both in activity and in selectivity for the reduction of acetamidoacrylic acid.
Publication type
journal article
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