A Continuing Career in Biocatalysis: Frances H. Arnold

ACS Catal. 2019 Nov 1;9(11):9775-9788. doi: 10.1021/acscatal.9b02737. Epub 2019 Sep 17.

Abstract

On the occasion of Professor Frances H. Arnold's recent acceptance of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, we honor her numerous contributions to the fields of directed evolution and biocatalysis. Arnold pioneered the development of directed evolution methods for engineering enzymes as biocatalysts. Her highly interdisciplinary research has provided a ground not only for understanding the mechanisms of enzyme evolution but also for developing commercially viable enzyme biocatalysts and biocatalytic processes. In this Account, we highlight some of her notable contributions in the past three decades in the development of foundational directed evolution methods and their applications in the design and engineering of enzymes with desired functions for biocatalysis. Her work has created a paradigm shift in the broad catalysis field.

Keywords: C–H functionalization; P450s; abiological functions; biocatalysis; carbene transfer reactions; directed evolution; enzyme engineering; nitrene transfer reaction.