The Oxygen Dilemma

A Severe Challenge for the Application of Monooxygenases?

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

Dirk Holtmann (DECHEMA Research Institute)

Frank Hollmann (TU Delft - BT/Biocatalysis)

Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Copyright
© 2016 Dirk Holtmann, F. Hollmann
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201600176
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Copyright
© 2016 Dirk Holtmann, F. Hollmann
Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Issue number
15
Volume number
17
Pages (from-to)
1391-1398
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Monooxygenases are promising catalysts because they in principle enable the organic chemist to perform highly selective oxyfunctionalisation reactions that are otherwise difficult to achieve. For this, monooxygenases require reducing equivalents, to allow reductive activation of molecular oxygen at the enzymes' active sites. However, these reducing equivalents are often delivered to O2 either directly or via a reduced intermediate (uncoupling), yielding hazardous reactive oxygen species and wasting valuable reducing equivalents. The oxygen dilemma arises from monooxygenases' dependency on O2 and the undesired uncoupling reaction. With this contribution we hope to generate a general awareness of the oxygen dilemma and to discuss its nature and some promising solutions.