Chemo-bio catalysis using carbon supports: application in H2-driven cofactor recycling

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Abstract

Heterogeneous biocatalytic hydrogenation is an attractive strategy for clean, enantioselective CX reduction. This approach relies on enzymes powered by H2-driven NADH recycling. Commercially available carbon-supported metal (metal/C) catalysts are investigated here for direct H2-driven NAD+reduction. Selected metal/C catalysts are then used for H2oxidation with electrons transferredviathe conductive carbon support material to an adsorbed enzyme for NAD+reduction. These chemo-bio catalysts show improved activity and selectivity for generating bioactive NADH under ambient reaction conditions compared to metal/C catalysts. The metal/C catalysts and carbon support materials (all activated carbon or carbon black) are characterised to probe which properties potentially influence catalyst activity. The optimised chemo-bio catalysts are then used to supply NADH to an alcohol dehydrogenase for enantioselective (>99% ee) ketone reductions, leading to high cofactor turnover numbers and Pd and NAD+reductase activities of 441 h−1and 2347 h−1, respectively. This method demonstrates a new way of combining chemo- and biocatalysis on carbon supports, highlighted here for selective hydrogenation reactions.

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APA

Zhao, X., Cleary, S. E., Zor, C., Grobert, N., Reeve, H. A., & Vincent, K. A. (2021). Chemo-bio catalysis using carbon supports: application in H2-driven cofactor recycling. Chemical Science, 12(23), 8105–8114. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1sc00295c

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