journal article
LitStream Collection
doi: 10.1002/anie.201900055pmid: 30913359
Carbohydrates are attached and removed in living systems through the action of carbohydrate‐active enzymes such as glycosyl transferases and glycoside hydrolases. The molecules resulting from these enzymes have many important roles in organisms, such as cellular communication, structural support, and energy metabolism. In general, each carbohydrate transformation requires a separate catalyst, and so these enzyme families are extremely diverse. To make this diversity manageable, high‐throughput approaches look at many enzymes at once. Similarly, high‐throughput approaches can be a powerful way of finding inhibitors that can be used to tune the reactivity of these enzymes, either in an industrial, a laboratory, or a medicinal setting. In this review, we provide an overview of how these enzymes and inhibitors can be sought using techniques such as high‐throughput natural product and combinatorial library screening, phage and mRNA display of (glyco)peptides, fluorescence‐activated cell sorting, and metagenomics.
Schreyer, Lucas; Properzi, Roberta; List, Benjamin
doi: 10.1002/anie.201900932pmid: 30840780
High acidity and structural confinement are pivotal elements in asymmetric acid catalysis. The recently introduced imidodiphosphorimidate (IDPi) Brønsted acids have met with remarkable success in combining those features, acting as powerful Brønsted acid catalysts and “silylium” Lewis acid precatalysts in numerous thus far inaccessible transformations. Substrates as challenging to activate as simple olefins were readily transformed, ketones were employed as acceptors in aldolizations allowing sub‐ppm level catalysis, whereas enolates of the smallest donor aldehyde, acetaldehyde, did not polymerize but selectively added a single time to a variety of acceptor aldehydes.
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