Affiliation:
1. Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering Code 6900 U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Washington DC 20375 USA
2. National Research Council Washington DC 20001 USA
Abstract
AbstractSynthetic biology is touted as the next industrial revolution as it promises access to greener biocatalytic syntheses to replace many industrial organic chemistries. Here, it is shown to what synthetic biology can offer in the form of multienzyme cascades for the synthesis of the most basic of new materials—chemicals, including especially designer chemical products and their analogs. Since achieving this is predicated on dramatically expanding the chemical space that enzymes access, such chemistry will probably be undertaken in cell‐free or minimalist formats to overcome the inherent toxicity of non‐natural substrates to living cells. Laying out relevant aspects that need to be considered in the design of multi‐enzymatic cascades for these purposes is begun. Representative multienzymatic cascades are critically reviewed, which have been specifically developed for the synthesis of compounds that have either been made only by traditional organic synthesis along with those cascades utilized for novel compound syntheses. Lastly, an overview of strategies that look toward exploiting bio/nanomaterials for accessing channeling and other nanoscale materials phenomena in vitro to direct novel enzymatic biosynthesis and improve catalytic efficiency is provided. Finally, a perspective on what is needed for this field to develop in the short and long term is presented.
Funder
Office of Naval Research
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
National Research Council
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science
Cited by
4 articles.
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