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(6S)-2,2,6-trimethylcyclohexane-1,4-dione is a chemical with a specific purpose. Lookchem provides you with multiple data and supplier information of this chemical.

60686-83-1

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60686-83-1 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 60686-83-1 includes 8 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 5 digits, 6,0,6,8 and 6 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 8 and 3 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 60686-83:
(7*6)+(6*0)+(5*6)+(4*8)+(3*6)+(2*8)+(1*3)=141
141 % 10 = 1
So 60686-83-1 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

60686-83-1Downstream Products

60686-83-1Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Characterization of xenobiotic reductase A (XenA): Study of active site residues, substrate spectrum and stability

Yanto, Yanto,Yu, Hua-Hsiang,Hall, Melanie,Bommarius, Andreas S.

, p. 8809 - 8811 (2010)

Xenobiotic reductase A (XenA) has broad catalytic activity and reduces various α,β-unsaturated and nitro compounds with moderate to excellent stereoselectivity. Single mutants C25G and C25V are able to reduce nitrobenzene, a non-active substrate for the wild type, to produce aniline. Total turnover is dominated by chemical rather than thermal instability. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2010.

A robust and stereocomplementary panel of ene-reductase variants for gram-scale asymmetric hydrogenation

Nett, Nathalie,Duewel, Sabine,Schmermund, Luca,Benary, Gerrit E.,Ranaghan, Kara,Mulholland, Adrian,Opperman, Diederik J.,Hoebenreich, Sabrina

, (2021/01/25)

We report an engineered panel of ene-reductases (ERs) from Thermus scotoductus SA-01 (TsER) that combines control over facial selectivity in the reduction of electron deficient C[dbnd]C double bonds with thermostability (up to 70 °C), organic solvent tolerance (up to 40 % v/v) and a broad substrate scope (23 compounds, three new to literature). Substrate acceptance and facial selectivity of 3-methylcyclohexenone was rationalized by crystallisation of TsER C25D/I67T and in silico docking. The TsER variant panel shows excellent enantiomeric excess (ee) and yields during bi-phasic preparative scale synthesis, with isolated yield of up to 93 % for 2R,5S-dihydrocarvone (3.6 g). Turnover frequencies (TOF) of approximately 40 000 h?1 were achieved, which are comparable to rates in hetero- and homogeneous metal catalysed hydrogenations. Preliminary batch reactions also demonstrated the reusability of the reaction system by consecutively removing the organic phase (n-pentane) for product removal and replacing with fresh substrate. Four consecutive batches yielded ca. 27 g L?1 R-levodione from a 45 mL aqueous reaction, containing less than 17 mg (10 μM) enzyme and the reaction only stopping because of acidification. The TsER variant panel provides a robust, highly active and stereocomplementary base for further exploitation as a tool in preparative organic synthesis.

Metals in Biotechnology: Cr-Driven Stereoselective Reduction of Conjugated C=C Double Bonds

Rauch, Marine C. R.,Gallou, Yann,Delorme, Léna,Paul, Caroline E.,Arends, Isabel W. C. E.,Hollmann, Frank

, p. 1112 - 1115 (2019/12/27)

Elemental metals are shown to be suitable sacrificial electron donors to drive the stereoselective reduction of conjugated C=C double bonds using Old Yellow Enzymes as catalysts. Both direct electron transfer from the metal to the enzyme as well as mediated electron transfer is feasible, although the latter excels by higher reaction rates. The general applicability of this new chemoenzymatic reduction method is demonstrated, and current limitations are outlined.

Solar-Assisted eBiorefinery: Photoelectrochemical Pairing of Oxyfunctionalization and Hydrogenation Reactions

Choi, Da Som,Hollmann, Frank,Kim, Jinhyun,Park, Chan Beum

supporting information, p. 15886 - 15890 (2020/07/06)

Inspired by natural photosynthesis, biocatalytic photoelectrochemical (PEC) platforms are gaining prominence for the conversion of solar energy into useful chemicals by combining redox biocatalysis and photoelectrocatalysis. Herein, we report a dual biocatalytic PEC platform consisting of a molybdenum (Mo)-doped BiVO4 (Mo:BiVO4) photoanode and an inverse opal ITO (IO-ITO) cathode that gives rise to the coupling of peroxygenase and ene-reductase-mediated catalysis, respectively. In the PEC cell, the photoexcited electrons generated from the Mo:BiVO4 are transferred to the IO-ITO and regenerate reduced flavin mononucleotides to drive ene-reductase-catalyzed trans-hydrogenation of ketoisophrone to (R)-levodione. Meanwhile, the photoactivated Mo:BiVO4 evolves H2O2 in situ via a two-electron water-oxidation process with the aid of an applied bias, which simultaneously supplies peroxygenases to drive selective hydroxylation of ethylbenzene into enantiopure (R)-1-phenyl-1-hydroxyethane. Thus, the deliberate integration of PEC systems with redox biocatalytic reactions can simultaneously produce valuable chemicals on both electrodes using solar-powered electrons and water.

Combining Photo-Organo Redox- and Enzyme Catalysis Facilitates Asymmetric C-H Bond Functionalization

Zhang, Wuyuan,Fueyo, Elena Fernandez,Hollmann, Frank,Martin, Laura Leemans,Pesic, Milja,Wardenga, Rainer,H?hne, Matthias,Schmidt, Sandy

supporting information, p. 80 - 84 (2019/01/04)

In this study, we combined photo-organo redox catalysis and biocatalysis to achieve asymmetric C–H bond functionalization of simple alkane starting materials. The photo-organo catalyst anthraquinone sulfate (SAS) was employed to oxyfunctionalise alkanes to aldehydes and ketones. We coupled this light-driven reaction with asymmetric enzymatic functionalisations to yield chiral hydroxynitriles, amines, acyloins and α-chiral ketones with up to 99 % ee. In addition, we demonstrate functional group interconversion to alcohols, esters and carboxylic acids. The transformations can be performed as concurrent tandem reactions. We identified the degradation of substrates and inhibition of the biocatalysts as limiting factors affecting compatibility, due to reactive oxygen species generated in the photocatalytic step. These incompatibilities were addressed by reaction engineering, such as applying a two-phase system or temporal and spatial separation of the catalysts. Using a selection of eleven starting alkanes, one photo-organo catalyst and 8 diverse biocatalysts, we synthesized 26 products and report for the model compounds benzoin and mandelonitrile > 97 % ee at gram scale.

Enantio- A nd regioselective: Ene-reductions using F420H2-dependent enzymes

Mathew, Sam,Trajkovic, Milos,Kumar, Hemant,Nguyen, Quoc-Thai,Fraaije, Marco W.

supporting information, p. 11208 - 11211 (2018/10/15)

In the past decade it has become clear that many microbes harbor enzymes that employ an unusual flavin cofactor, the F420 deazaflavin cofactor. Herein we show that F420-dependent reductases (FDRs) can successfully perform enantio-, regio- A nd chemoselective ene-reductions. For the first time, we have demonstrated that F420H2-driven reductases can be used as biocatalysts for the reduction of α,β-unsaturated ketones and aldehydes with good conversions (>99%) and excellent regioselectivities and enantiomeric excesses (>99% ee). Noteworthily, FDRs typically display an opposite enantioselectivity when compared to the well established FMN-dependent Old Yellow Enzymes (OYEs).

Better than Nature: Nicotinamide Biomimetics That Outperform Natural Coenzymes

Knaus, Tanja,Paul, Caroline E.,Levy, Colin W.,De Vries, Simon,Mutti, Francesco G.,Hollmann, Frank,Scrutton, Nigel S.

supporting information, p. 1033 - 1039 (2016/02/05)

The search for affordable, green biocatalytic processes is a challenge for chemicals manufacture. Redox biotransformations are potentially attractive, but they rely on unstable and expensive nicotinamide coenzymes that have prevented their widespread expl

Recombinant Cyanobacteria for the Asymmetric Reduction of C=C Bonds Fueled by the Biocatalytic Oxidation of Water

K?ninger, Katharina,Gómez Baraibar, álvaro,Mügge, Carolin,Paul, Caroline E.,Hollmann, Frank,Nowaczyk, Marc M.,Kourist, Robert

supporting information, p. 5582 - 5585 (2016/05/09)

A recombinant enoate reductase was expressed in cyanobacteria and used for the light-catalyzed, enantioselective reduction of C=C bonds. The coupling of oxidoreductases to natural photosynthesis allows asymmetric syntheses fueled by the oxidation of water. Bypassing the addition of sacrificial cosubstrates as electron donors significantly improves the atom efficiency and avoids the formation of undesired side products. Crucial factors for product formation are the availability of NADPH and the amount of active enzyme in the cells. The efficiency of the reaction is comparable to typical whole-cell biotransformations in E. coli. Under optimized conditions, a solution of 100 mg prochiral 2-methylmaleimide was reduced to optically pure 2-methylsuccinimide (99 % ee, 80 % yield of isolated product). High product yields and excellent optical purities demonstrate the synthetic usefulness of light-catalyzed whole-cell biotransformations using recombinant cyanobacteria.

Cell-free protein engineering of Old Yellow Enzyme 1 from Saccharomyces pastorianus

Quertinmont, Leann T.,Lutz, Stefan

, p. 7282 - 7287 (2016/10/29)

In protein engineering, cell-free transcription/translation of linear mutagenic DNA templates can tremendously accelerate and simplify the screening of enzyme variants. Using the RApid Parallel Protein EvaluatoR (RAPPER) protocol, we have evaluated the impact of amino acid substitutions and loop truncations on substrate specificity and stereoselectivity of Old Yellow Enzyme 1 from Saccharomyces pastorianus. Our study demonstrates the benefit of systematically assessing amino acid variations including substrate profiling to explore sequence-function space.

Pinpointing a Mechanistic Switch Between Ketoreduction and “Ene” Reduction in Short-Chain Dehydrogenases/Reductases

Lygidakis, Antonios,Karuppiah, Vijaykumar,Hoeven, Robin,Ní Cheallaigh, Aisling,Leys, David,Gardiner, John M.,Toogood, Helen S.,Scrutton, Nigel S.

supporting information, p. 9596 - 9600 (2016/08/10)

Three enzymes of the Mentha essential oil biosynthetic pathway are highly homologous, namely the ketoreductases (?)-menthone:(?)-menthol reductase and (?)-menthone:(+)-neomenthol reductase, and the “ene” reductase isopiperitenone reductase. We identified a rare catalytic residue substitution in the last two, and performed comparative crystal structure analyses and residue-swapping mutagenesis to investigate whether this determines the reaction outcome. The result was a complete loss of native activity and a switch between ene reduction and ketoreduction. This suggests the importance of a catalytic glutamate vs. tyrosine residue in determining the outcome of the reduction of α,β-unsaturated alkenes, due to the substrate occupying different binding conformations, and possibly also to the relative acidities of the two residues. This simple switch in mechanism by a single amino acid substitution could potentially generate a large number of de novo ene reductases.

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