Numerous enzymes have been found to catalyze additional and completely different types of reactions relative to the natural activity they evolved for. This interesting phenomenon, called catalytic promiscuity, has proven to be a fruitful guide for the development of novel biocatalysts for organic synthesis purposes.A remarkable example of an enzyme with catalytic promiscuity is 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT). This enzyme naturally catalyzes an enol-keto tautomerization step as part of a catabolic pathway for aromatic hydrocarbons, but can also promiscuously catalyze carbon-carbon bond-forming aldol and Michael-type addition reactions.Mehran Rahimi investigated the mechanism by which 4-OT catalyzes these unnatural reactions. Hydrogen-de...