Confirmation of Breslow's hypothesis: A carbene stable in liquid water
Abstract
In 1958, Breslow proposed that the coenzyme thiamine, also known as vitamin B 1 , acted as a source of transient carbenes that facilitated the catalytic activity of various important enzymes. This was a controversial hypothesis, as, then and still now, carbenes are believed to be incompatible with water. Although evidence such as deuterium labeling experiments and the trapping of the so-called Breslow intermediate support Breslow's hypothesis, no spectroscopic evidence has ever been presented to prove that carbenes can exist or be generated in water. In this study, we disclose the synthesis and complete spectroscopic characterization by nuclear magnetic resonance and a single-crystal structure of a carbene that can be generated in water and isolated as a stable species, thus unambiguously validating Breslow's visionary hypothesis.
Copyright and License
© 2025 the Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC).
Acknowledgement
We thank H. M. Nelson for comments.
Funding
V.L. and W.A.G. acknowledge the National Science Foundation USA CHE-2003418 and CBET 2311117, respectively.
Supplemental Material
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC11988420
- National Science Foundation
- CHE-2003418
- National Science Foundation
- CBET-2311117
- Caltech groups
- Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering (CCE)
- Publication Status
- Published