• This light-powered catalyst mimics photo

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon Nov 15 21:30:42 2021
    This light-powered catalyst mimics photosynthesis
    The new molecule can improve the yield of reactions for generating pharmaceuticals and other useful compounds.

    Date:
    November 15, 2021
    Source:
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Summary:
    By mimicking photosynthesis, researchers have designed a new type
    of photocatalyst that can absorb light and use it to help catalyze
    a variety of chemical reactions that would otherwise be difficult
    to perform.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    By mimicking photosynthesis, the light-driven process that plants use to produce sugars, MIT researchers have designed a new type of photocatalyst
    that can absorb light and use it to drive a variety of chemical reactions.


    ==========================================================================
    The new type of catalyst, known as a biohybrid photocatalyst, contains
    a light- harvesting protein that absorbs light and transfers the energy
    to a metal- containing catalyst. This catalyst then uses the energy to
    perform reactions that could be useful for synthesizing pharmaceuticals
    or converting waste products into biofuels or other useful compounds.

    "By replacing harmful conditions and reagents with light, photocatalysis
    can make pharmaceutical, agrochemical, and fuel synthesis more efficient
    and environmentally compatible," says Gabriela Schlau-Cohen, an associate professor of chemistry at MIT and the senior author of the new study.

    Working with colleagues at Princeton University and North Carolina State University, the researchers showed that the new photocatalyst could significantly boost the yield of the chemical reactions they tried. They
    also demonstrated that unlike existing photocatalysts, their new catalyst
    can absorb all wavelengths of light.

    MIT graduate student Paul Cesana is the lead author of the paper, which
    appears today in the journal Chem.

    High-energy reactions Most catalysts speed up reactions by lowering the
    energy barrier needed for the reaction to occur. In the past 20 years
    or so, chemists have made great strides in developing photocatalysts -- catalysts that can absorb energy from light.

    This allows them to catalyze reactions that couldn't occur without that
    extra input of energy.



    ==========================================================================
    "In photocatalysis, the catalyst absorbs light energy to go to a much more highly excited electronic state. And through that energy, it introduces reactivity that would be prohibitively energy-intensive if all that were available were ground-state energy," Schlau-Cohen says.

    This is analogous to what plants do during photosynthesis. Plant cells' photosynthetic machinery includes light-absorbing pigments such as
    chlorophyll that capture photons from sunlight. This energy is then
    transferred to other proteins that store the energy as ATP, and that
    energy is then used to produce carbohydrates.

    In previous work on photocatalysts, researchers have used one molecule
    to perform both the light absorption and catalysis. This approach has limitations, because most of the catalysts used can only absorb certain wavelengths of light, and they don't absorb light efficiently.

    "When you have one molecule that needs to do the light harvesting and
    the catalysis, you can't simultaneously optimize for both things,"
    Schlau-Cohen says. "It's for that reason that natural systems separate
    them. In photosynthesis, there's a dedicated architecture where some
    proteins do the light harvesting and then funnel that energy directly
    to the proteins that do the catalysis." To create their new biohybrid catalyst, the researchers decided to mimic photosynthesis and combine
    two separate elements: one to harvest light and another to catalyze
    the chemical reaction. For the light-harvesting component, they used a
    protein called R-phycoerythrin (RPE), found in red algae. They attached
    this protein to a ruthenium-containing catalyst, which has been previously
    used for photocatalysis on its own.



    ========================================================================== Working with North Carolina State University researchers led by
    professor of chemistry Felix Castellano, Schlau-Cohen's lab showed
    that the light-harvesting protein could effectively capture light and
    transfer it to the catalyst. Then, Princeton University researchers led
    by David MacMillan, a professor of chemistry and a recent recipient of
    the Nobel Prize in chemistry, tested the performance of the catalyst in
    two different types of chemical reactions. One is a thiol-ene coupling,
    which joins a thiol and an alkene to form a thioether, and the other
    replaces a leftover thiol group with methyl after peptide coupling.

    The Princeton team showed that the new biohybrid catalyst could boost
    the yield of these reactions up to tenfold, compared to the ruthenium photocatalyst on its own. They also found that the reactions could
    occur under illumination with red light, which has been difficult
    to achieve with existing photocatalysts and is beneficial because it
    produces fewer unwanted side reactions and is less damaging to tissue,
    so it could potentially be used in biological systems.

    Chemical synthesis This improved photocatalyst could be incorporated
    into chemical processes that use the two reactions tested in this study,
    the researchers say. Thiol-ene coupling is useful for creating compounds
    used in protein imaging and sensing, drug delivery, and biomolecule
    stability. As one example, it is used to synthesize lipopeptides that may enable easier uptake of antigen vaccine candidates. The other reaction
    the researchers tested, cysteinyl desulfurization, has many applications
    in peptide synthesis, including the production of enfurvitide, a drug
    that could be used to treat HIV.

    This type of photocatalyst could also potentially be used to drive a
    reaction called lignin depolymerization, which could help to generate
    biofuels from wood or other plant materials that are difficult to
    break down.

    The researchers now plan to try swapping in different light harvesting
    proteins and catalysts, to adapt their approach for a variety of chemical reactions.

    "We did a proof of principle where you can separate light harvesting and catalytic function. Now we want to think about varying the catalytic
    piece and varying the light-harvesting piece to expand that toolkit,
    to see if this approach can work in different solvents and in different reactions," Schlau- Cohen says.

    This work was supported as part of the Bioinspired Light-Escalated
    Chemistry (BioLEC) Energy Frontier Research Center, funded by the
    U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology. Original written by Anne
    Trafton. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Paul T. Cesana, Beryl X. Li, Samuel G. Shepard, Stephen I. Ting,
    Stephanie M. Hart, Courtney M. Olson, Jesus I. Martinez Alvarado,
    Minjung Son, Talia J. Steiman, Felix N. Castellano, Abigail
    G. Doyle, David W.C.

    MacMillan, Gabriela S. Schlau-Cohen. A biohybrid strategy for
    enabling photoredox catalysis with low-energy light. Chem, 2021;
    DOI: 10.1016/ j.chempr.2021.10.010 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/11/211115123534.htm

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