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A scientist works in the lab of Rice’s Xue Sherry Gao. Photo Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University |
Just as a choreographer’s notation tells a dancer to strike a particular pose, an enzyme newly discovered by Rice University scientists is able to tell specific molecules precisely how to arrange themselves, down to the angle of single hydrogen bonds.
Biomolecular engineers at Rice identified a new Diels-Alderase (DAase), an enzyme that catalyzes the Diels-Alder reaction, a widely used method of synthesizing important materials and pharmaceuticals, from raw materials for plastics and fuels to synthetic steroids.
The enzyme, known as CtdP, was previously thought to be a different type of protein — a “regulator” controlling gene expression. Regulators typically do not serve a catalytic function, meaning they cannot “transform compound A into compound B,” said study co-author Xue Sherry Gao.