All Stories

  1. ChemInform Abstract: 1,8-Cineole: Chemical and Biological Oxidation Reactions and Products
  2. Preparation of silybin phase II metabolites: Streptomyces catalyzed glucuronidation
  3. 1,8‐Cineole: Chemical and Biological Oxidation Reactions and Products
  4. A new derivative detected in accelerated ageing of artesunate-amodiaquine fixed dose combination tablets
  5. Microbial enantioselective removal of the N-benzyloxycarbonyl amino protecting group
  6. Microbial Transformations of Artemisinin and Artemisinin Derivatives: an Example of the Microbial Generation of Molecular Diversity
  7. Biocatalysis in Organic Synthesis
  8. Microbial glucuronidation of polyphenols
  9. Microbial production of phase I and phase II metabolites of midazolam
  10. Microbial production of phase I and phase II metabolites of propranolol
  11. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Transformation of Diterpenes: Hydroxylation of Sclareol, Manool and Derivatives by Mucor plumbeus.
  12. ChemInform Abstract: Synthesis of Two Cyclic Analogs of Glutamic Acid: cis- and trans- Pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylic Acids.
  13. ChemInform Abstract: Microbiological Hydroxylations: Myths and Realities
  14. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Hydroxylation and Functionalization of Synthetic Polycyclic Enones.
  15. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Reduction of 1-Tetralone 2-Carboxyesters as a Source of New Asymmetric Synthons.
  16. ChemInform Abstract: New Application of the Mitsunobu Reaction for the Preparation of (. delta.-2) Derivatives in Terpenic Series.
  17. ChemInform Abstract: Application of Biocatalysts in Organic Synthesis
  18. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Hydroxylation and Functionalization of Hydrindenones.
  19. ChemInform Abstract: Stereospecific Preparation of Glycidic Esters from 2-Chloro-3- hydroxyesters. Application to the Synthesis of (2R,3S)-3- Phenylisoserine.
  20. ChemInform Abstract: Enantioselective Synthesis of Homologous Methyl-Substituted Bicyclic Enones Through Michael-Type Alkylation of Chiral Imines.
  21. ChemInform Abstract: A Chemoenzymatic Preparation of Both Enantiomers of ω- Hydroxymethyl-Substituted Lactones.
  22. ChemInform Abstract: Selective Synthesis of 1-, and 3-Carbomethoxy 2-Tetralol Stereoisomers by Microbial Reduction of the Corresponding Tetralones.
  23. ChemInform Abstract: Practical and Efficient 1α-Hydroxylation of 4,4-Dimethyl-2-ene Derivatives in Terpenic Series.
  24. ChemInform Abstract: New Reactions with CrO3/3,5-Dimethylpyrazole Reagent: Formation of Cross-Conjugated Dienones from β-Cyclocitral and Safranal Derivatives.
  25. ChemInform Abstract: Synthesis and Pharmacological Characterization of Aminocyclopentanetricarboxylic Acids: New Tools to Discriminate Between Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes.
  26. Biocatalysis in Organic Synthesis
  27. Vitamin K-dependent carboxylase
  28. Naphthalene-dioxygenase-catalysed cis-dihydroxylation of azaarene derivatives
  29. Reductions of cyclic β-keto esters by individual Saccharomyces cerevisiae dehydrogenases and a chemo-enzymatic route to (1R,2S)-2-methyl-1-cyclohexanol
  30. Biocatalysis in Organic Synthesis
  31. Microbial Cleavage of C—F Bond
  32. Microbial cleavage of CF bond
  33. Biocatalysis in Organic Synthesis
  34. Parameters and mechanistic studies on the oxidative ring cleavage of synthetic heterocyclic naphthoquinones by Streptomyces strains
  35. Microbial models of animal drug metabolism
  36. Oxidation Using a Biocatalyst: Hydroxylation at a Saturated Carbon Atom
  37. ChemInform Abstract: A Biosynthetic Microbial Ability Applied for the Oxidative Ring Cleavage of Non‐Natural Heterocyclic Quinones.
  38. Editorial overview: Better enzymes for green chemistry
  39. Microbiologically-assisted hemisynthesis of 1α-hydroxydrimenol
  40. A new example of 1α-hydroxylation of drimanic terpenes through combined microbial and chemical processes
  41. A biosynthetic microbial ability applied for the oxidative ring cleavage of non-natural heterocyclic quinones
  42. ChemInform Abstract: Regio- and Stereoselective Microbial Hydroxylation of Terpenoid Compounds
  43. Dynamic resolution and stereoinversion of secondary alcohols by chemo-enzymatic processes
  44. Chemoenzymatic synthesis of enantiopure 1,1′-disubstituted ferrocenyl aminoalcohols
  45. Expression and Characterization of the Naturally Occurring Mutation L394R in Human  -Glutamyl Carboxylase
  46. Dioxygenase-catalysed formation of dihydrodiol metabolites of N-methyl-2-pyridone
  47. Microbial hydroxylation/functionalization of terpenoid synthons derived from communic acids
  48. Regio- and Stereoselective Microbial Hydroxylation of Terpenoid Compounds
  49. Microbial models of drug metabolism: microbial transformations of trimegestone® (RU27987), a 3-Keto-Δ4,9(10)-19-norsteroid drug
  50. Preparation and use of (S)-O-acetyllactyl chloride (Mosandl's reagent) as a chiral derivatizing agent
  51. Microbial Models for Drug Metabolism
  52. Microbial reduction of varying size cyclic β-ketoesters.
  53. Functionalization of natural drimanic compounds via microbial/chemical tandem reactions
  54. Aminobicyclo[2.2.1.]heptane dicarboxylic acids (ABHD), rigid analogs of ACPD and glutamic acid: synthesis and pharmacological activity on metabotropic receptors mGluR1 and mGluR2
  55. ChemInform Abstract: A Convenient and Efficient Synthesis of (2S,4R)‐ and (2S,4S)‐4‐Methylglutamic Acid.
  56. Les bioconversions à l'honneur
  57. ChemInform Abstract: Dynamic Kinetic Resolution in the Microbial Reduction of α‐ Monosubstituted β‐Oxoesters. Part 6. The Reduction of 2‐ Carbethoxy‐cycloheptanone and 2‐Carbethoxy‐cyclooctanone.
  58. Synthesis and Pharmacological Characterization of Aminocyclopentanetricarboxylic Acids:  New Tools to Discriminate between Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes
  59. A Convenient and Efficient Synthesis of (2S,4R)- and (2S,4S)-4-Methylglutamic Acid
  60. Microbial biotransformations of a synthetic immunomodulating agent, HR325
  61. Dynamic kinetic resolution in the microbial reduction of α-monosubstituted β-oxoesters: the reduction of 2-carbethoxycycloheptanone and 2-carbethoxy-cyclooctanone
  62. ChemInform Abstract: Production of Ring‐Substituted D‐Phenylglycines by Microbial or Enzymatic Hydrolysis/Deracemization of the Corresponding DL‐Hydantoins.
  63. Solution conformation of α, β or γ-methylglutamyl-containing derivatives as probes of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase using molecular modelling and nuclear magnetic resonance
  64. Conformational Study in Water by NMR and Molecular Modeling of α-Methyl-α-Amino Acid:  Differential Conformational Properties of α-Cyclic and α-Methylglutamic Acid
  65. ChemInform Abstract: Resolution and Regioselective Protection of Glutamic Acid Analogues. Part 2. Synthesis, Resolution and Configuration Assignment of (+)‐. alpha.‐Methyl‐4‐carboxyphenylglycine (M4CPG).
  66. New reactions with CrO3/3,5-dimethylpyrazole reagent: Formation of cross-conjugated dienones from β-cyclocitral and safranal derivatives
  67. Conformational analysis of glutamic acid analogues as probes of glutamate receptors using molecular modelling and NMR methods. Comparison with specific agonists
  68. Production of ring-substituted D-phenylglycines by microbial or enzymatic hydrolysis/deracemisation of the corresponding DL-hydantoins
  69. Practical and Efficient 1α-Hydroxylation of 4,4-Dimethyl-2-Ene Derivatives in Terpenic Series
  70. ChemInform Abstract: Conformational Study in Water by NMR and Molecular Modeling of Cyclic Glutamic Acid Analogues as Probes of Vitamin K Dependent Carboxylase
  71. Selective synthesis of 1-, and 3-carbomethoxy 2-tetralol stereoisomers by microbial reduction of the corresponding tetralones
  72. Resolution and regioselective protection of glutamic acid analogues. II- Synthesis, resolution and configuration assigsment of (+)-α-methyl-4-car☐yphenylglycine (M4CPG)
  73. Fungal Metabolism of Cortisol. Major Formation of a 5β-Dihydro-Derivative byCurvularia Lunata
  74. Enantioselective Synthesis of Homologous Methyl-Substituted Bicyclic Enones Through Michael-Type Alkylation of Chiral Imines
  75. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Reduction of 2‐Chloro‐3‐oxoesters.
  76. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Reduction of 2‐Cyano‐1‐tetralones.
  77. Conformational analysis by NMR spectroscopy and molecular simulation in water of methylated glutamic acids, agonists at glutamate receptors
  78. Biodegradation of nitroaromatic compounds
  79. A chemoenzymatic preparation of both enantiomers of ω-hydroxymethyl-substituted lactones
  80. Conformational Study in Water by NMR and Molecular Modeling of Cyclic Glutamic Acid Analogues as Probes of Vitamin K Dependent Carboxylase
  81. Microbial hydroxylation and functionalization of hydrindenones
  82. Synthesis of conformationally-constrained stereospecific analogs of glutamic acid as antagonists of metabotropic receptors
  83. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Synthesis of Optically Pure (R)‐2,4,4‐Trimethyl‐3‐(2′‐ hydroxyethyl)‐cyclohex‐2‐en‐1‐ol, a New and Versatile Chiral Building Block for Terpene Synthesis.
  84. Microbial reduction of 2-cyano-1-tetralones
  85. The microbial reduction of 2-chloro-3-oxoesters
  86. Stereospecific preparation of glycidic esters from 2-chloro-3-hydroxyesters. Application to the synthesis of (2R,3S)-3-phenylisoserine
  87. 4-Hydroxy-2-(N-Indolinyl)Butane, A New Metabolite of Indoline in Fungi
  88. Microbial transformation of steroids: Contribution to 14α-hydroxylations
  89. Microbial synthesis of optically pure (R)-2,4,4-trimethyl-3-(2′-hydroxyethyl)-cyclohex-2-en-1-ol, a new and versatile chiral building block for terpene synthesis
  90. Conformational analysis by NMR spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulation in water and X-ray crystallography of glutamic acid analogues: isomers of 1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid
  91. Microbial hydroxylation of some synthetic Aristotelia alkaloids
  92. New Application of the Mitsunobu Reaction for the Preparation of (Δ-2) Derivatives in Terpenic Series
  93. Biotransformation of Terpenic Compounds by Fungi. II - Metabolism of α-(-)-thujone
  94. Chemoenzymatic access to enantiomeric bicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-2,5-diones
  95. Microbial reduction of 1-tetralone 2-carboxyesters as a source of new asymmetric synthons
  96. Resolution and regioselective protection of glutamic acid analogues. I- resolution of diastereomeric α-boroxazolidone derivatives.
  97. Effect of various analogues of D-glutamic acid on the D-glutamate-adding enzyme from Escherichis coli
  98. ChemInform Abstract: Enzymatic Resolution of Hindered Secondary Alcohols: Efficient Access to a New Simplified Chiral Auxiliary.
  99. Microbial hydroxylation and functionalization of synthetic polycyclic enones
  100. Enzymatic resolution of hindered secondary alcohols: Efficient access to a new simplified chiral auxiliary
  101. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Reduction of 2‐Chloro‐3‐aryl‐3‐oxopropionic Acid Esters.
  102. Conformational analysis of cyclohexane-derived analogues of glutamic acid by X-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy in solution, and molecular dynamics
  103. Conformational analysis of cyclohexane-derived analogues of glutamic acid by X-ray crystallography, NMR in solution and molecular dynamics
  104. Microbiological hydroxylation in the drimane series
  105. Microbial reduction of 2-chloro-3-aryl-3-oxopropionic acid esters
  106. Biotransformation of terpenic compounds by fungi I. Metabolism of R-(+)-pulegone
  107. ChemInform Abstract: Stereocontrolled Reduction of β‐Keto Esters by Geotrichum candidum. Preparation of (D)‐3‐Hydroxyalkanoates.
  108. Stereocontrolled Reduction of β-Ketoesters with Geotrichum Candidum
  109. A Study of the Stereocontrolled Reduction of Aliphatic β-Ketoesters by Geotrichum candidum
  110. ChemInform Abstract: Microbial Hydroxylation and Functionalization of Synthetic Bicyclic Enones.
  111. Microbial transformation of diterpenes: Hydroxylation of sclareol, manool and derivatives by Mucor plumbeus
  112. Synthesis of two cyclic analogs of glutamic acid: cis- and trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylic acids
  113. Microbial hydroxylation of sclareol by mucor plumbeus
  114. Synthesis of diastereoisomeric peptides incorporating cycloglutamic acids Substrate specificity of vitamin K‐dependent carboxylation
  115. Microbial hydroxylation and functionalization of synthetic bicyclic enones
  116. Vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of peptides containing glutamic acid analogues
  117. Stereocontrolled reduction of β-ketoesters by Geotrichum candidum. Preparation of D-3-hydroxyalkanoates
  118. The Microbiological Reduction/Oxidation Concept: An Approach to a Chemoenzymatic Preparation of Optically Pure Lactones and Lactonic Synthons
  119. Vitamin K-dependent carboxylase: effect of ammonium sulfate on substrate carboxylation and on inhibition by stereospecific substrate analogs
  120. Preface
  121. Synthesis and resolution of dhcga, a new conformationally rigid 3,4-dehydroglutamic acid analogue
  122. Stereocontrolled Reduction of Alpha-Methyl Beta-Ketoesters by Geotrichum Candidum
  123. High-performance liquid chromatographic separation of 11-hydroxylauric acid enantiomers
  124. Total synthesis of 12-O-benzoyl-6,7,14,15-tetradehydro leukotriene B4 methyl ester: precursor of labeled LTB4
  125. Synthèse asymétrique d'alcools benchrotréniques par voie microbiologique
  126. Resolution of α-substituted amino acid enantiomers by high-performance liquid chromatography after derivatization with a chiral adduct of o-phthalaldehyde
  127. Enantioselective microbial reduction of transition-metal-complexed aromatic ketones
  128. Chemoenzymatic synthesis of conformationally rigid glutamic acid analogues
  129. The use of methyl substituted chiral synthons in the synthesis of pine sawflies pheromones
  130. Sterols and bile acids
  131. Enantioselective hydrolysis of 2-(chlorophenoxy)propionic esters by esterases.
  132. Diastereo- and enantioselective microbiological reduction of 2-methyl 3-oxoalkanoates
  133. Preparation of both enantiomers of a chiral lactone through combined microbiological reduction and oxidation.
  134. High-performance liquid chromatographic separation of the enantiomers of substituted 2-aryloxypropionic acid methyl esters
  135. New chiral building blocks by microbial asymmetric reduction: A direct access to functionalized 2R,3R- and 2S,3R-2-methyl-3-hydroxy butyrate synthons
  136. The shikimate pathway V. Fluorine-containing analogues of 3-deoxy-D-arabino hept-2-ulosonate-7-phosphate (DAHP)
  137. Synthesis of L-glutamic acid stereospecifically labelled at C-4 with tritium: stereochemistry of tritium release catalyzed by the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase in the absence of carboxylation
  138. Yeast-catalyzed asymmetric reduction of benzil and benzoin to hydrobenzoin
  139. Diastereoselective and enantioselective microbial reduction of cyclic alpha-alkyl beta-ketoesters
  140. A short, efficient, highly selective synthesis of (1R,3S)-(cis)-chrysanthemic acid through the microbiological reduction of 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1,4-cyclohexanedione
  141. Gas chromatographic resolution of substituted glutamic acid enantiomers
  142. Synthesis of L‐glutamic acid stereospecifically labeled at C‐4 with deuterium
  143. Vitamin K‐dependent carboxylation: inhibition by a peptide containing 4‐methylene glutamic acid
  144. An enzymatic method for the determination of enantiomeric composition and absolute configuration of deuterated or tritiated succinic acid
  145. Nature of products formed in the vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of synthetic peptides
  146. Stereoselective synthesis of (1R,3S)--chrysanthemic acid through microbiological reduction of 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl 1,4-cyclohexanedione.
  147. Vitamin K dependent carboxylation: Study of diastereoisomeric γ-methylglutamic acid containing peptidic substrates
  148. Synthesis of phosphono analogues of 3-deoxy -d-arabino-hept-2-ulosonic acid 7-phosphate
  149. Effect of reduced vitamin K esters on vitamin K-dependent carboxylation
  150. Enzymic properties of phosphonic analogues of D-erythrose 4-phosphate
  151. The interaction of phosphonate and homophosphonate analogues of 3-deoxy-D-arabino heptulosonate 7-phosphate with 3-dehydroquinate synthetase from Escherichia coli
  152. Vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of synthetic substrates. Nature of the products
  153. The effect of some mixed function oxidase inducers on aryl hẏdrocarbon hydroxylase and epoxide hydrase in nuclei and microsomes from rat liver and lung. The effect of cigarette smoke
  154. Synthesis of DL-5,5′-dihydroxyleucine the reduction product of γ carboxy glutamic acid
  155. Synthesis of L-tryptophan by immobilized Escherichia coli cells
  156. Synthesis of L-tryptophan by immobilized Escherichia coli cells
  157. The shikimate pathway
  158. The shikimate pathway
  159. Biosynthesis of mavioquinone
  160. Mavioquinone, A new quinone from Mycobacterium avium
  161. Preparation of [1-3H]polyprenyl pyrophosphates
  162. Biochemical study on ubiquinone biosynthesis in Escherichia coli: I. Specificity of para hydroxybenzoate polyprenyltransferase
  163. Separability of enzymes of the common aromatic biosynthetic pathway in Mycobacterium phlei
  164. 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthetase of Mycobacterium phlei: Partial purification and feedback inhibition
  165. The shikimate pathway
  166. Chain motions in lipid-water and protein-lipid-water phases: A spin-label and X-ray diffraction study
  167. The shikimate pathway: I. - Preparation of 3-3H, 4-3H and 2,4-3H2 D-shikimic acid
  168. Structure and configuration of the polyprenoid side chain of dihydromenaquinones from Myco- and Corynebacteria
  169. C-méthylation des desméthylménaquinones
  170. C-méthylation des desméthylménaquinones: I. Préparation de desméthylménaquinones et analogues modifiés
  171. Correlations between structure and spectroscopic properties in membrane model systems
  172. Isomériecis-trans des ménaquinones et oxydations phosphorylantes dans les extraits deMycobacterium phlei
  173. A new intermediate in naphthoquinone and menaquinone biosynthesis
  174. Incorporation de l'acide shikimique dans le noyau des naphtoquinones d'origine bactérienne et végétale
  175. Biosynthèse du noyau naphtoquinonique des ménaquinones bactériennes
  176. Menaquinone (MK-6) in the sulfate-reducing obligate anaerobe, Desulfovibrio
  177. C‐methylation of desmethylmenaquinones: Specificity of the enzymatic system of mycobacterium phlei
  178. Non-incorporation de tritium dans la dihydroménaquinone-9 deMycobacterium phlei au cours des oxydations phosphorylantes
  179. Structure of the dihydromenaquinone-9 of Mycobacterium phlei
  180. Biosynthesis of dihydromenaquinone-9 by Mycobacterium phlei
  181. Biosynthesis of tuberculostearic acid in a cell-free extract. Identification of 10-methylenestearic acid as an intermediate
  182. BIOSYNTHESE DE LA VITAMINE K2(45)H PAR DES EXTRAITS ACELLULAIRES DE MYCOBACTERIUM PHLEI
  183. Biosynthesis of a vitamin K2 by cell-free extracts of Mycobacterium phlei