Chiral amines can be made by insertion of a carbene into an N-H bond using two-catalyst systems that combine a transition metal carbene-transfer catalyst and a chiral proton-transfer catalyst to enforce stereocontrol. Haem proteins can effect carbene N-H insertion, but asymmetric protonation in an active site replete with proton sources is challenging. Here we describe engineered cytochrome P450 enzymes that catalyze carbene N-H insertion to prepare biologically relevant α-amino lactones with high activity and enantioselectivity (up to 32,100 total turnovers, >99% yield and 98% e.e.). These enzymes serve as dual-function catalysts, inducing carbene transfer and promoting the subsequent proton transfer with excellent stereoselectivity in a single active site. Computational studies uncover the detailed mechanism of this new-to-nature enzymatic reaction and explain how active-site residues accelerate this transformation and provide stereocontrol.Amines are ubiquitous in bioactive molecules and functional materials 1,2 , and the development of efficient and selective methods for C-N bond construction remains one of the central themes of modern organic chemistry and biochemistry 3-5 . Among the numerous ways to construct C-N bonds, carbene insertion into N-H bonds 6-10 benefits from the high reactivity of carbene species and excellent functional group compatibility to rapidly build complex nitrogen-containing molecules. In the last several years, empowered by directed evolution, metallo-haem-dependent enzymes (cytochromes P450, cytochromes c and globins, for example) have exhibited an impressive ability to catalyze non-natural carbene-and nitrene-transfer reactions with high efficiency and selectivity. Specifically, haem proteins have been engineered to perform carbene N-H insertion reactions with catalytic efficiency far exceeding their small-molecule counterparts (up to thousands of total turnover numbers (TTN)) [11][12][13][14] . However, compared to cyclopropanation 15 , C-H insertion 16 and many other carbene transfer reactions also catalyzed by haem proteins 17,18 , N-H insertion reactions are still underdeveloped, especially with respect to high stereocontrol.In small-molecule catalysis, a common strategy for asymmetric N-H insertion is to employ a transition-metal catalyst for carbene transfer along with a separate chiral proton-transfer catalyst (PTC) for stereoinduction (Fig. 1a) 19,20 . The carbene precursor first reacts to form a metal carbene species, which can be trapped by the amine substrate through nucleophilic attack, generating an ylide intermediate. The asymmetric protonation of the ylide is then guided by a chiral PTC, such as a chiral phosphoric acid 19 or amino-thiourea 20 ; other proton sources need to be strictly avoided to ensure high asymmetric induction. Computational studies by Shaik and coworkers 21 have revealed a similar mechanism for haem protein-catalyzed N-H insertion reactions. Thus, the challenge in achieving high enantioselectivity originates from the difficulty in precisely contr...