The essential biological role of rare earth elements lay hidden until the discovery in
2011 that lanthanides are specifically incorporated into a bacterial methanol
dehydrogenase. Only recently has this observation gone from a curiosity to a major
research area, with the appreciation for the widespread nature of lanthanide-utilizing
organisms in the environment and the discovery of other lanthanide-binding proteins and
systems for selective uptake. While seemingly exotic at first glance, biological
utilization of lanthanides is very logical from a chemical perspective. The early
lanthanides (La, Ce, Pr, Nd) primarily used by biology are abundant in the environment,
perform similar chemistry to other biologically useful metals and do so more efficiently
due to higher Lewis acidity, and possess sufficiently distinct coordination chemistry to
allow for selective uptake, trafficking, and incorporation into enzymes. Indeed, recent
advances in the field illustrate clear analogies with the biological coordination
chemistry of other metals, particularly CaII and FeIII, but with
unique twists—including cooperative metal binding to magnify the effects of small
ionic radius differences—enabling selectivity. This Outlook summarizes the recent
developments in this young but rapidly expanding field and looks forward to potential
future discoveries, emphasizing continuity with principles of bioinorganic chemistry
established by studies of other metals. We also highlight how a more thorough
understanding of the central chemical question—selective lanthanide recognition
in biology—may impact the challenging problems of sensing, capture, recycling,
and separations of rare earths.