Are there any general heuristics about when a Biochemical Route to a chemical molecule is competitive versus an Organic Synthetic Route?
My naive understanding was that once the number of steps or the complexity of a target increases a synthetic route becomes less favorable because of the multiplier effect of step-wise yields, intermediate isolation etc.
On the other hand, for the smaller "commodity" feed-stocks a chemical route is favorable because the throughput of a chemical catalyst & typical high T conditions is large compared to a bio-route. Especially when the cost of growing and processing biomass in a bio-reactor tends to be high.
Another place where bio-routes win are chiral molecules.
Are there other heuristics or comments that people might have?
Context: I was motivated to ask when reading up on Phenylacetylcarbinol. This molecule looks fairly simple and I was surprised to read that the dominant commercial process is fermentation and not chemical. Well, in hindsight Ethanol is a simple molecule too.