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  • Understanding how membrane-bound styrene oxide isomerase (SOI) catalyses the Meinwald rearrangement—a Lewis-acid-catalysed isomerization of an epoxide to a carbonyl compound—can be useful as SOI represents a green alternative to chemical synthesis. Here, the catalytic mechanism of SOI was determined using cryo-EM, EPR spectroscopy, mutagenesis, functional assays and docking experiments.

    • Basavraj Khanppnavar
    • Joel P. S. Choo
    • Xiaodan Li
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Calcium difluoride is a source of fluorochemicals, but the reactivity of Ca–F moieties is not well understood. Now a library of molecular Ca–F complexes featuring unique structural motifs has been synthesized, including via fluorochemical defluorination. Studies of mono- and dinuclear systems provided structure–activity relationships for E–F bond formation.

    • Job J. C. Struijs
    • Mathias A. Ellwanger
    • Simon Aldridge
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Dimetallocenes are a narrow class of compounds represented by the homobimetallic examples dizincocene and diberyllocene. Now a heterobimetallic dimetallocene featuring lithium and aluminium centres has been synthesized. The Al–Li bond is shown to cleave upon reaction with N-heterocyclic carbenes and heteroallenes.

    • Inga-Alexandra Bischoff
    • Sergi Danés
    • André Schäfer
    ArticleOpen Access
  • John Steele and Stephen Wallace discuss recent advances in the chemical and biotechnological synthesis of the prolific platform chemical adipic acid.

    • John F. C. Steele
    • Stephen Wallace
    In Your Element
  • Chiral sulfur pharmacophores are crucial in drug discovery, but the controlled synthesis of sulfinamides with stereogenic-at-sulfur(IV) centres is a long-standing challenge. Now a method for the catalytic asymmetric synthesis of sulfinamides and sulfinate esters has been developed that features the acyl transfer sulfinylation of diverse nucleophiles, including aromatic amines and alcohols, using chiral 4-arylpyridine N-oxides as catalysts.

    • Tao Wei
    • Han-Le Wang
    • Hai-Ming Guo
    Article
  • Fusicoccane diterpenoids are complex natural products with intricate tricyclic skeletons and intriguing biological activities. Now a chemoenzymatic strategy has been developed for modularly synthesizing a number of compounds from the family. This approach combines de novo skeletal construction and hybrid C–H oxidations, allowing the synthesis of ten different natural products.

    • Yanlong Jiang
    • Hans Renata
    Article
  • The number of known high-oxidation-state transuranic compounds remains limited, and these typically feature high coordination numbers and/or multiply-bonded donor atoms. Now, a tetrahedral, pentavalent neptunium complex supported by four monoanionic ligands has been isolated and characterized. This complex is stable in the solid state and undergoes a proton-coupled electron transfer reaction in solution.

    • Julie E. Niklas
    • Kaitlyn S. Otte
    • Henry S. La Pierre
    Article
  • Evolution separates complex modern enzymes from their hypothetical simpler early ancestors, which raises the question of how unevolved sequences can develop new functions. Here a library of non-natural protein sequences was subjected to ultrahigh-throughput screens in microfluidic droplets, leading to the isolation of a phosphodiesterase enzyme capable of hydrolysing the biological second messenger, cyclic AMP.

    • J. David Schnettler
    • Michael S. Wang
    • Michael H. Hecht
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Two-dimensional covalent organic frameworks (2D COFs) enable the construction of bespoke functional materials, but designing dynamic 2D COFs is challenging. Now it has been shown that perylene-diimide-based COFs can open and close their pores upon uptake or removal of guests, while fully retaining their crystalline long-range order. Moreover, the variable COF geometry enables stimuli-responsive optoelectronic properties.

    • Florian Auras
    • Laura Ascherl
    • Thomas Bein
    Article
  • A robust organometallic platform is developed for stoichiometric cross-couplings of common aryl and alkyl electrophiles under a single set of conditions. Inexpensive and persistent organonickel complexes are prepared by electrolysis and implemented in the diversification of drug-like molecules with high reliability from a diverse set of alkyl precursors.

    • Long P. Dinh
    • Hunter F. Starbuck
    • Christo S. Sevov
    Article
  • X-ray diffraction analysis typically affords the static 3D structures of given compounds or materials, but to understand chemical processes, the visualization of fast structural changes is desirable. Time-resolved femtosecond crystallography has now been used to monitor the structural dynamics of a photoactive metal–organic framework.

    • Lauren E. Hatcher
    • Paul R. Raithby
    News & Views
  • The precision synthesis of cyclic polymers with ultrahigh molar mass (UHMM) and circularity is challenging. Now, a method that involves superbase-mediated living linear-chain growth followed by macromolecular cyclization triggered by protic quenching enables the on-demand production of UHMM cyclic polymers with a narrow dispersity and closed-loop chemical recyclability.

    Research Briefing
  • Excited by the prospect of future missions to the Jupiter system, Bruce Gibb explores the chemistry of Jupiter’s moons and wonders whether there could be life on Europa.

    • Bruce C. Gibb
    Thesis
  • Overcrowded alkene-derived molecular motors convert light and heat into chirality-directed unidirectional rotary motion, but the efficiency of their photochemical isomerization remains limited. Now formylation of the motor core has been shown to boost all aspects of motor photochemistry by improving photochemical efficiency, diminishing competing processes and redshifting absorption.

    • Jinyu Sheng
    • Wojciech Danowski
    • Ben L. Feringa
    Article
  • The construction of analogues of natural gap junctions would provide a bottom–up strategy for building intercellular communication pathways for synthetic cells. Now artificial intercellular gap junctions have been prepared from unimolecular tubular channels by mimicking the hydrophobic–hydrophilic–hydrophobic triblock structure of natural junction channels.

    • Yong-Hong Fu
    • Yi-Fei Hu
    • Jun-Li Hou
    Article
  • Advances in the development of cytoskeletal-like materials with modular structures and mechanics are pivotal for the engineering of synthetic cells. Now actin-mimetic supramolecular peptide networks have been designed using programmable peptide–DNA crosslinkers, giving rise to tunable tactoid-shaped bundles and mechanical properties that control spatial localization, the diffusion of payloads and shape changes within artificial cells.

    • Margaret L. Daly
    • Kengo Nishi
    • Ronit Freeman
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Knots reduce the tensile strength of macroscopic threads and fibres. Now it has been shown that the presence of a well-defined overhand knot in a polymer chain can substantially increase the rate of scission of the polymer under tension, as deformation of the polymer backbone induced by the tightening knot activates otherwise unreactive covalent bonds.

    • Min Zhang
    • Robert Nixon
    • David A. Leigh
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The selective synthesis of ultrahigh-molar-mass (UHMM) cyclic polymers from direct polymerization is elusive. Using a chemically recyclable polythioester as a model, it has now been shown that a common superbase mediates living linear-chain growth, followed by proton-triggered linear-to-cyclic topological transformation, producing UHMM cyclic polymers with a narrow dispersity.

    • Li Zhou
    • Liam T. Reilly
    • Eugene Y.-X. Chen
    Article
  • Chlorine-containing waste streams pose potential risks to human health and the environment, so their remediation represents a significant challenge. Now, chlorinated wastes have been successfully repurposed as chlorinating reagents for use in the preparation of organic chemicals and pharmaceutical ingredients.

    • Andrew Jordan
    News & Views
  • Understanding the ways by which metal-containing catalysts carry out a reaction is a chemical puzzle. Now, investigations of a multi-metallic molecular system uncover how the self-assembly of molecular catalysts facilitates cooperation between active species and improves the conversion of water to hydrogen gas.

    • Ana Sonea
    • Jeffrey J. Warren
    News & Views