biocatalysis
Biocatalysis is the use of biological systems — particularly enzymes — to catalyze chemical reactions, enabling precise and efficient transformations of organic compounds. In plant science, biocatalysis is central to understanding how plants synthesize complex secondary metabolites, from alkaloids to terpenes, through enzymatic pathways. Advances in directed evolution and enzyme engineering allow researchers to probe, replicate, and even enhance these natural biosynthetic processes for applications in medicine, agriculture, and sustainable chemistry.
open_in_new WikipediaBacterial ester hydrolases from the soil-plant system and their rol...
Bacteria quietly working in your garden soil produce enzymes that help your plants fight drought,...
Investigating Opioid Receptor Activity through Biocatalytic Halogen...
Kratom, a tropical tree long brewed as a tea for pain relief across Southeast Asia, may hold the ...
Characterization of acetovanillone degradation in wild-type and eng...
The woody leftovers from paper mills and biofuel plants could become the raw material for plastic...
Purification and characterization of the laccase produced by the Ly...
The bright synthetic dyes rinsed from clothes and factory waste end up in waterways where they bl...
Catalytic mechanisms, engineering, and cascade biocatalysis of mono...
Every plastic bottle in your recycling bin has a better chance of actually becoming a new product...