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    Enzyme Activity by Design: An Artificial Rhodium Hydroformylase for Linear Aldehydes
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2017-9-13) Jarvis, Amanda G.; Obrecht, Lorenz; Deuss, Peter J.; Laan, Wouter; Gibson, Emma K.; Wells, Peter P.; Kamer, Paul C. J.
    Artificial metalloenzymes (ArMs) are hybrid catalysts that offer a unique opportunity to combine the superior performance of natural protein structures with the unnatural reactivity of transition-metal catalytic centers. Therefore, they provide the prospect of highly selective and active catalytic chemical conversions for which natural enzymes are unavailable. Herein, we show how by rationally combining robust site-specific phosphine bioconjugation methods and a lipid-binding protein (SCP-2L), an artificial rhodium hydroformylase was developed that displays remarkable activities and selectivities for the biphasic production of long-chain linear aldehydes under benign aqueous conditions. Overall, this study demonstrates that judiciously chosen protein-binding scaffolds can be adapted to obtain metalloenzymes that provide the reactivity of the introduced metal center combined with specifically intended product selectivity.
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    Simple ruthenium-catalyzed reductive amination enables the synthesis of a broad range of primary amines
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018) Senthamarai, Thirusangumurugan; Murugesan, Kathiravan; Schneidewind, Jacob; Kalevaru, Narayana V.; Baumann, Wolfgang; Neumann, Helfried; Kamer, Paul C. J.; Beller, Matthias; Jagadeesh, Rajenahally V.
    The production of primary benzylic and aliphatic amines, which represent essential feedstocks and key intermediates for valuable chemicals, life science molecules and materials, is of central importance. Here, we report the synthesis of this class of amines starting from carbonyl compounds and ammonia by Ru-catalyzed reductive amination using H2. Key to success for this synthesis is the use of a simple RuCl2(PPh3)3 catalyst that empowers the synthesis of >90 various linear and branched benzylic, heterocyclic, and aliphatic amines under industrially viable and scalable conditions. Applying this catalyst, −NH2 moiety has been introduced in functionalized and structurally diverse compounds, steroid derivatives and pharmaceuticals. Noteworthy, the synthetic utility of this Ru-catalyzed amination protocol has been demonstrated by upscaling the reactions up to 10 gram-scale syntheses. Furthermore, in situ NMR studies were performed for the identification of active catalytic species. Based on these studies a mechanism for Ru-catalyzed reductive amination is proposed.
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    Multi-nuclear, high-pressure, operando FlowNMR spectroscopic study of Rh/PPh3 – catalysed hydroformylation of 1-hexene
    (Cambridge [u.a.] : Soc., 2021) Bara-Estaún, Alejandro; Lyall, Catherine L.; Lowe, John P.; Pringle, Paul G.; Kamer, Paul C. J.; Franke, Robert; Hintermair, Ulrich
    The hydroformylation of 1-hexene with 12 bar of 1 : 1 H2/CO in the presence of the catalytic system [Rh(acac)(CO)2]/PPh3 was successfully studied by real-time multinuclear high-resolution FlowNMR spectroscopy at 50 °C. Quantitative reaction progress curves that yield rates as well as chemo- and regioselectivities have been obtained with varying P/Rh loadings. Dissolved H2 can be monitored in solution to ensure true operando conditions without gas limitation. 31P{1H} and selective excitation 1H pulse sequences have been periodically interleaved with 1H FlowNMR measurements to detect Rh–phosphine intermediates during the catalysis. Stopped-flow experiments in combination with diffusion measurements and 2D heteronuclear correlation experiments showed the known tris-phosphine complex [RhH(CO)(PPh3)3] to generate rapidly exchanging isomers of the bis-phosphine complex [Rh(CO)2(PPh3)2] under CO pressure that directly enter the catalytic cycle. A new mono-phosphine acyl complex has been identified as an in-cycle reaction intermediate.