Samenvatting
Biocatalytic valorization of lignin-derived phenolic compounds has emerged as a promising biorefinery strategy in the challenging production of value-added fine chemicals. VAO(vanillyl alcohol oxidase)-type oxidases are promising biocatalysts for modifying lignin-derived phenols. Mechanistic studies on the prototype VAO have revealed that a pivotal product intermediate, a quinone methide, is transiently formed and allows several different oxidation reactions. The work described in this thesis aimed to develop robust VAO-type enzymes that selectively oxidize different lignin-derived phenols into valuable chemicals. For this, eugenol oxidase has been comprehensively investigated for tuning the stability, chemoselectivity and activity through sequence-, structure- and computation-aided enzyme engineering. Whole-cell or enzyme cascade reactions were developed to generate high value compounds starting from lignin-derived alkylphenols. Besides, a novel approach for performing biocatalytic oxidative amination via an “enzyme-trapped quinone methide” was developed. This expands the catalytic repertoire of VAO-type oxidases and offers new opportunities for upgrading lignin.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Kwalificatie | Doctor of Philosophy |
Toekennende instantie |
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Begeleider(s)/adviseur |
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Datum van toekenning | 30-mei-2023 |
Plaats van publicatie | [Groningen] |
Uitgever | |
DOI's | |
Status | Published - 2023 |