Production of enantiopure styrene oxide by recombinant Escherichia coli synthesizing a two-component styrene monooxygenase.
暂无分享,去创建一个
M G Wubbolts | M. Wubbolts | S. Panke | B. Witholt | A. Schmid | S Panke | A Schmid | B Witholt | Sven Panke | Andreas Schmid
[1] C. Colombo,et al. Sequencing and functional analysis of styrene catabolism genes from Pseudomonas fluorescens ST , 1997, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[2] W. A. Nugent,et al. Beyond Nature's Chiral Pool: Enantioselective Catalysis in Industry , 1993, Science.
[3] B. Witholt,et al. Synthesis of alkane hydroxylase of Pseudomonas oleovorans increases the iron requirement of alk+ bacterial strains. , 1998, Biotechnology and bioengineering.
[4] V. de Lorenzo,et al. Analysis of Pseudomonas gene products using lacIq/Ptrp-lac plasmids and transposons that confer conditional phenotypes. , 1993, Gene.
[5] S. Ensign,et al. Alkene Monooxygenase from Xanthobacter Strain Py2 , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[6] J. D. de Bont,et al. Microbial transformation of epoxides , 1998 .
[7] J. Kingma,et al. Bioconversion of N-Octane to Octanoic Acid by a Recombinant Escherichia Coli Cultured in a Two-Liquid Phase Bioreactor , 1991, Bio/Technology.
[8] C. Morisseau,et al. Asymmetric hydrolysis of racemic para-nitrostyrene oxide using an epoxide hydrolase preparation from Aspergillus niger , 1997 .
[9] J. I. Brauman,et al. Regioselective and enantioselective epoxidation catalyzed by metalloporphyrins. , 1993, Science.
[10] A. Cremieux,et al. Antibacterial activity of phenethyl alcohol and resulting membrane alterations. , 1990, Research in microbiology.
[11] B. Witholt,et al. Biooxidation of n-octane by a recombinant Escherichia coli in a two liquid-phase system: effect of medium components on cell growth and alkane oxidation activity. , 1992 .
[12] M. Wubbolts,et al. An Alkane-Responsive Expression System for the Production of Fine Chemicals , 1999, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[13] Ramesh N. Patel,et al. Epoxidation of Short-Chain Alkenes by Resting-Cell Suspensions of Propane-Grown Bacteria , 1983, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[14] M. Wubbolts,et al. Selected Industrial Biotransformations , 1998 .
[15] Schmid,et al. Medium chain length alkane solvent-cell transfer rates in two-liquid phase, pseudomonas oleovorans cultures , 1998, Biotechnology and bioengineering.
[16] S. Harayama,et al. Primary structure of xylene monooxygenase: similarities to and differences from the alkane hydroxylation system , 1991, Journal of bacteriology.
[17] D. Leak,et al. Alkene Monooxygenase-Catalyzed Whole Cell Epoxidation in a Two-Liquid Phase System , 1998 .
[18] K. Luyben,et al. Ethylene oxide production by immobilized Mycobacterium Py1 in a gas-solid bioreactor , 1983 .
[19] J. Crosby. Synthesis of optically active compounds: A large scale perspective , 1991 .
[20] John M. Woodley,et al. Extractive biocatalysis: the use of two-liquid phase biocatalytic reactors to assist product recovery , 1990 .
[21] M. Wubbolts,et al. Biosynthesis of synthons in two-liquid-phase media. , 2000, Biotechnology and bioengineering.
[22] John M. Woodley,et al. In Situ Product Removal as a Tool for Bioprocessing , 1993, Bio/Technology.
[23] M. Franssen,et al. Prospects for the increased application of biocatalysts in organic transformations. , 1993, Trends in biotechnology.
[24] J. Bont,et al. Bioformation of optically pure epoxides , 1993 .
[25] H. Eklund,et al. Di-iron-carboxylate proteins. , 1995, Current opinion in structural biology.
[26] H. Dalton,et al. Purification and characterization of the alkene monooxygenase from Nocardia corallina B-276 , 1995 .
[27] M. Lilly,et al. Two-liquid phase biocatalysis: epoxidation of 1,7-octadiene by Pseudomonas putida , 1986 .
[28] D. Leak,et al. The microbial production of epoxides , 1992 .
[29] J. Tramper,et al. Production of propene oxide in an organic liquid-phase immobilized cell reactor , 1987 .
[30] K. Furuhashi. Biological Routes to Optically Active Epoxides , 1993 .
[31] H. Dalton,et al. The Biotransformation of Propylene to Propylene Oxide by Methylococcus Capsulatus (Bath): 1. Optimization of Rates , 1992 .
[32] J. Tramper,et al. Modelling the effects of mass transfer on kinetics of propene epoxidation of immobilized Mycobacterium cells: 1. Pseudo-one-substrate conditions and negligible product inhibition , 1986 .
[33] P. Besse,et al. Chemical and biological synthesis of chiral epoxides , 2010 .
[34] M. Wubbolts,et al. Towards a Biocatalyst for (S)-Styrene Oxide Production: Characterization of the Styrene Degradation Pathway of Pseudomonas sp. Strain VLB120 , 1998, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[35] B. Fox,et al. Mössbauer studies of alkane omega-hydroxylase: evidence for a diiron cluster in an integral-membrane enzyme. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[36] M. Wubbolts,et al. Efficient production of optically active styrene epoxides in two-liquid phase cultures , 1994 .
[37] C. S. Matthews,et al. Microbial Alkene Epoxidation—Merits and Limitations , 1994 .
[38] B. Fox,et al. Eight histidine residues are catalytically essential in a membrane-associated iron enzyme, stearoyl-CoA desaturase, and are conserved in alkane hydroxylase and xylene monooxygenase. , 1994, Biochemistry.