Issue 6, 2021

Catalytic bias in oxidation–reduction catalysis

Abstract

Cataytic bias refers to the propensity of a reaction catalyst to effect a different rate acceleration in one direction versus the other in a chemical reaction under non-equilibrium conditions. In biocatalysis, the inherent bias of an enzyme is often advantagous to augment the innate thermodynamics of a reaction to promote efficiency and fidelity in the coordination of catabolic and anabolic pathways. In industrial chemical catalysis a directional cataltyic bias is a sought after property in facilitating the engineering of systems that couple catalysis with harvest and storage of for example fine chemicals or energy compounds. Interestingly, there is little information about catalytic bias in biocatalysis likely in large part due to difficulties in developing tractible assays sensitive enough to study detailed kinetics. For oxidation–reduction reactions, colorimetric redox indicators exist in a range of reduction potentials to provide a mechanism to study both directions of reactions in a fairly facile manner. The current short review attempts to define catalytic bias conceptually and to develop model systems for defining the parameters that control catalytic bias in enzyme catalyzed oxidation–reduction catalysis.

Graphical abstract: Catalytic bias in oxidation–reduction catalysis

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
24 Oct 2020
Accepted
10 Dec 2020
First published
15 Dec 2020

Chem. Commun., 2021,57, 713-720

Author version available

Catalytic bias in oxidation–reduction catalysis

D. W. Mulder, J. W. Peters and S. Raugei, Chem. Commun., 2021, 57, 713 DOI: 10.1039/D0CC07062A

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