| Literature DB >> 29241292 |
Robert A Swyka1, David B Berkowitz1.
Abstract
The importance of discovering new chemical transformations and/or optimizing catalytic combinations has led to a flurry of activity in reaction screening. The in situ enzymatic screening (ISES) approach described here utilizes biological tools (enzymes/cofactors) to advance chemistry. The protocol interfaces an organic reaction layer with an adjacent aqueous layer containing reporting enzymes that act upon the organic reaction product, giving rise to a spectroscopic signal. ISES allows the experimentalist to rapidly glean information on the relative rates of a set of parallel organic/organometallic reactions under investigation, without the need to quench the reactions or draw aliquots. In certain cases, the real-time enzymatic readout also provides information on sense and magnitude of enantioselectivity and substrate specificity. This article contains protocols for single-well (relative rate) and double-well (relative rate/enantiomeric excess) ISES, in addition to a colorimetric ISES protocol and a miniaturized double-well procedure. © 2017 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: UV/vis spectrophotometry; catalysis; enzymatic screening; metal-ligand combinations; reaction discovery
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29241292 PMCID: PMC5734113 DOI: 10.1002/cpch.30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Protoc Chem Biol ISSN: 2160-4762