Status of protein engineering for biocatalysts: How to design an industrially useful biocatalyst

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Abstract

Recent advances in the development of both experimental and computational protein engineering tools have enabled a number of further successes in the development of biocatalysts ready for large-scale applications. Key tools are first, the targeting of libraries, leading to far smaller but more useful libraries than in the past, second, the combination of structural, mechanistic, and sequence-based knowledge often based on prior successful cases, and third, the advent of structurally based algorithms allowing the design of novel functions. Based on these tools, a number of improved biocatalysts for pharmaceutical applications have been presented, such as an (R)-transaminase for the synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) of sitagliptin (Januvia®) and ketoreductases, glucose dehydrogenases, and haloalkane dehalogenases for the API synthesis toward atorvastatin (Lipitor®) and montelukast (Singulair®). © 2010.

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Bommarius, A. S., Blum, J. K., & Abrahamson, M. J. (2011, April). Status of protein engineering for biocatalysts: How to design an industrially useful biocatalyst. Current Opinion in Chemical Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2010.11.011

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