Using biocatalysis to integrate organic chemistry into a molecular biology laboratory course

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Abstract

Current cutting-edge biomedical investigation requires that the researcher have an operational understanding of several diverse disciplines. Biocatalysis is a field of science that operates at the crossroads of organic chemistry, biochemistry, microbiology, and molecular biology, and provides an excellent model for interdisciplinary research. We have developed an inquiry-based module that uses the mutagenesis of the yeast reductase, YDL124w, to study the bioorganic synthesis of the taxol side-chain, a pharmacologically important molecule. Using related structures, students identify regions they think will affect enzyme stereoselective, design and generate site-specific mutants, and then characterize the effect of these changes on enzyme activity. This laboratory activity gives our students experience, working in a scientific discipline outside of biology and exposes them to techniques and equipment they do not normally work with in a molecular biology course. These inter-disciplinary experiences not only show the relevance of other sciences to biology, but also give our students the ability to communicate more effectively with scientists outside their discipline. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Beers, M., Archer, C., Feske, B. D., & Mateer, S. C. (2012). Using biocatalysis to integrate organic chemistry into a molecular biology laboratory course. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 40(2), 130–137. https://doi.org/10.1002/bmb.20578

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