Bacteria such as E. coli can be engineered to make them produce useful pharmaceuticals or non-natural molecules, for example building blocks for plastics which are otherwise obtained from crude oil. These molecules, however, can be toxic to the bacteria itself, limiting the productivity of the bacteria and economic benefit. If the obtained molecule can be converted further into a less toxic or more valuable product, usefulness of the developed process can be increased. Performing this conversion with transition-metal catalysis would be interesting as compounds may be obtained which nature cannot produce on its own. In order to enable the combination of transition-metal catalysis and bacteria, a way to make them compatible has to be found.In...