Introduction to Directed Evolution and Rational Design as Protein Engineering Techniques -Methods and Aims of Directed Enzyme Evolution -Short History of Directed Enzyme Evolution -Methods and Aims of Rational Design of EnzymesScreening and Selection Techniques Gene Mutagenesis MethodsGuidelines for Applying Gene Mutagenesis Methods in Organic Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Applications and BiotechnologyCase Studies of Protein Engineering of Activity and Selectivity -Epoxide Hydrolase -Transaminase as an Industrial Example with Pharmaceutical Application -Geranylgeranyl Diphosphate Synthase for Efficient Carotenoid Production -Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenases for Synthesis of Hydroxylation of Steroids Needed in the Preparation of Pharmaceuticals -Lipase for Stereocomplementary Production of Organic Compounds with Two Chirality Centers -Further Examples Using Other Enzyme TypesProtein Engineering of Enzyme Robustness -Examples of Relevance to Organic and Pharmaceutical Applications -Examples of Relevance to BiotechnologyArtificial Metallo-Enzymes for Promiscuous Transformations Using Known Organic Reaction Types as a GuideLearning Lessons from Protein EngineeringPerspectives for Future Work -In Extending Applications in Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry -In Extending Biotechnological Contributions to Ecology
Manfred T. Reetz is a former Director and presently Emeritus Professor at the Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung in Mülheim/Germany. He is a synthetic organic chemist who pioneered the concept of directed evolution of stereo- and regioselective enzymes as a prolific source of catalysts in organic chemistry and biotechnology. Reetz has received numerous German and international awards and prizes, and is member of the German National Academy Leopoldina, Academy of the German state of NRW, Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences, European Academy of Sciences, and Distinguished Scientist of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (China).Zhoutong Sun obtained his Ph.D in microbiology at Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2012, then he moved to Nanyang Technological University in Singapore as a research fellow. One year later, he moved to the MPI für Kohlenforschung and Marburg University for a postdoc with Prof. Manfred T. Reetz. In 2016, he became a full professor at Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. His research interests are in the discovery, design and engineering of biocatalysts as well as cascade reactions design and metabolic engineering.Ge Qu received his Ph.D in Bioinformatics from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland in 2015. Currently, he is working as an associated professor in the Reetz Laboratory at Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. His major research interests are the discovery and structure-based engineering of enzymes that have potential as industrial biocatalysts.