Reviews & Analysis

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  • Tertiary amines are poor directing groups for C(sp3)–H activation using Pdii catalysts due to favourable β-hydride elimination pathways. Now, an N-acetyl amino acid ligand is shown to shut down this deleterious pathway, enabling facile arylation of a highly medicinally relevant group of compounds.

    • Vinod G. Landge
    • Michael C. Young
    News & Views
  • The tumour microenvironment has a specific enzymatic fingerprint, which provides opportunities for cancer therapy. Now, two studies show how this unique chemical environment can be used to produce reporter molecules or nanoclusters within the tumour that can subsequently be identified in urine or breath, enabling cancer detection and monitoring.

    • Alexander N. Zelikin
    News & Views
  • Synthetic genetic circuits leverage the information processing capability of biological machinery to tackle complex sensing tasks, yet they lack many of the advantages inherent to electrical computation. Now, an interface has been designed that provides an electrical output for synthetic genetic circuits.

    • Robbyn K. Anand
    • Kira L. Rahn
    News & Views
  • Flavin-dependent halogenases catalyse the regioselective formation of carbon–chlorine and carbon–bromine bonds using oxygen and inorganic halide salts. Now, genome mining has led to the discovery of a previously unknown viral halogenase that catalyses the iodination of arenes, thereby providing a rare biocatalytic tool for the formation of carbon–iodine bonds.

    • Christian Schnepel
    • Nicholas J. Turner
    News & Views
  • Biological receptors distinguish between S- and R-enantiomers and these subtle differences in chirality can lead to vastly different protein affinities. Now, a proteomics approach has been developed that capitalizes on chirality to map enantiomeric probe pairs and provides a rapid and global view of protein ligandability within the cell.

    • Yuka Amako
    • Christina M. Woo
    News & Views
  • The Catellani reaction is a multi-component cascade sequence, catalysed by palladium and norbornene, which typically uses aromatic starting materials. Now, through the use of a modified norbornene co-catalyst, the scope of this reaction has been extended to alkenyl reagents, enabling the preparation of all-carbon tetrasubstituted olefins.

    • Giovanni Maestri
    • Etienne Derat
    News & Views
  • Despite the regular occurrence of high-profile accidents leading to serious injuries or deaths among lab personnel, the state of academic lab safety research has languished. Existing studies in this area are summarized and critiqued in this Review and suggestions are made for future research directions.

    • A. Dana Ménard
    • John F. Trant
    Review Article
  • Hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks can readily encapsulate native enzymes and keep them active beyond biological conditions.

    • Rui-Biao Lin
    • Banglin Chen
    News & Views
  • Although transporting a starship crewmember onto the surface of an alien planet is clearly science fiction, quantum state teleportation is not, and has been observed in various systems over the last few decades. Now, electron-spin teleportation has been observed in a carefully designed molecular system, paving the way for such behaviour to be tailored through molecular engineering.

    • Malcolm D. E. Forbes
    News & Views
  • The in situ, nanoscale positioning of a single molecule below the diffraction limit remains a challenge for chemists. Now, two approaches show how this can be accomplished through a combination of super-resolution microscopy and photo-inducible crosslinking chemistry.

    • Limin Xiang
    • Ke Xu
    News & Views
  • Nucleophiles directly substitute alcohols in the Mitsunobu reaction, but the process uses hazardous materials and generates an excessive amount of toxic waste. More than 50 years on from its initial discovery, chemists report a new catalytic version of the reaction, with water as the only by-product.

    • Andy McNally
    News & Views
  • To celebrate the centenary of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry in July 2019, the 47th IUPAC World Chemistry Congress took place in Paris. Its programme reflected how chemistry can help to address today and tomorrow’s most challenging issues, in particular, those relevant to human well-being and sustainable development.

    • Yi Yan Yang
    • Julien Nicolas
    Meeting Report
  • Frank–Kasper phases are topologically close-packed structures typically found in ordered mixtures of ‘hard particles’ such as metallic alloys. Now, a shape amphiphile has been shown to self-assemble into a Frank–Kasper Z phase, which had so far remained elusive in soft materials.

    • Abhiram Reddy
    • Gregory M. Grason
    News & Views
  • The biosynthetic pathway that produces the structurally uncharacterized gut bacterial genotoxin colibactin can produce unstable, macrocyclic products; however, the extent to which these structures contribute to colibactin’s biological activities is not yet fully understood. Now, two recent studies have provided new insights and reached distinct conclusions regarding their potential mechanisms of action and relevance for genotoxicity.

    • Erik S. Carlson
    • Emily P. Balskus
    News & Views
  • The shape complementarity between the active site of a catalyst and a substrate influences how effectively a reaction can be catalysed. Computational tools can be used to visualize the shape around the active centre of a range of catalysts and the application of such approaches to rationalize the behaviour of known catalysts — and to design new ones — is discussed.

    • Laura Falivene
    • Zhen Cao
    • Luigi Cavallo
    Perspective
  • Interlocked molecules can exhibit chiral stereogenic elements that are not found in covalently bound systems. Now, the shuttling of the ring in a [2]rotaxane has been shown to result in enantiomeric co-conformations that selectively bind chiral guests.

    • Ellen M. G. Jamieson
    • Stephen M. Goldup
    News & Views
  • ortho-Aminomethylphenylboronic acids are routinely used in sensors for carbohydrates, but the function of the o-aminomethyl group in enhancing binding affinity and modulating the emission of appended fluorophores has been the matter of some debate. This Review presents a unified picture of the structural features, mechanisms of sugar complexation and photophysics of these kinds of sensors.

    • Xiaolong Sun
    • Brette M. Chapin
    • Eric V. Anslyn
    Review Article
  • Interphases that form on the anode surface of lithium-ion batteries are critical for performance and lifetime, but are poorly understood. Now, a decade-old misconception regarding a main component of the interphase has been revealed, which could potentially lead to improved devices.

    • Stefan A. Freunberger
    News & Views
  • Proteins are biosynthesized from α-amino acids using hefty biological machinery, but the origin of this process on the early Earth is unclear. Now, a bottom-up approach for forming peptides, taking place under mild, prebiotically-plausible conditions, has been developed. This strategy uses α-aminonitrile precursors, bypassing α-amino acids entirely.

    • Robert Pascal
    • Irene A. Chen
    News & Views