For any finite dimensional Lie algebra $\mathfrak{g}$, we know that the universal enveloping algebra $U(\mathfrak{g})$ is a deformation of the symmetric algebra $S(\mathfrak{g})$. In fact let's define $$ U_t(\mathfrak{g}):=\text{T}(\mathfrak{g})/(X\otimes Y-Y\otimes X-t[X,Y]). $$ Then $S(\mathfrak{g})=U_0(\mathfrak{g})$ and $U(\mathfrak{g})=U_1(\mathfrak{g})$. Moreover we have the symmetrization map $$ I_{PBW}:S(\mathfrak{g})\longrightarrow U_t(\mathfrak{g}) $$ which pulls back the product on $U_t(\mathfrak{g})$ to a product on $S(\mathfrak{g})$. We call it the star product and denote it by $*_t$.
Obviously $*_t$ is different from the original product on $S(\mathfrak{g})$. In fact we can prove that the first order deformation of the product is governed by the $\textit{Poisson bracket}$ on $S(\mathfrak{g})$. More precisely the Poisson bracket is defined to be $ \text{{a,b}} := c^k _ {ij} X_k \cdot \partial^i a \cdot \partial^j b$ ( $c^k _ {ij}$ is the structure constant of $\mathfrak{g}$ ) and we can prove that $$ a *_t b= ab+\frac{t}{2}\text{{a,b}}+O(t^2). $$
Furthermore, we have the following result
The Poisson bracket vanishes on the invariant subalgebra $S(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathfrak{g}}$. This is almost the definition.
The symmetrization map $I_{PBW}$ maps $S(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathfrak{g}}$ isomorphically (as vector spaces, not as algebras) onto the center $Z(U(\mathfrak{g}))$.
(Duflo's Isomorphism Theorem) We can precompose a map $D: S(\mathfrak{g})\rightarrow S(\mathfrak{g})$ such that the composition restrict to $S(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathfrak{g}}$ is an $\textit{algebraic isomorphism}:~S(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathfrak{g}}\rightarrow Z(U(\mathfrak{g}))$.
The Duflo's Isomorphism Theorem is of course highly non-trivial and we can refer to Calaque and Rossi's book http://math.univ-lyon1.fr/~calaque/LectureNotes/LectETH.pdf, as well as well as many other resources, for further discussions.
I usually wonder that (maybe historically, maybe not) how people could expect that there is an algebraic isomorphism between $S(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathfrak{g}}$ and $Z(U(\mathfrak{g}))$. The thing we can notice is that the first order deformation, which is the Poisson bracket, vanishes. We know that it is a necessary condition (at least it should vanish in the second Hochschild cohomology) to find an algebraic isormorphism.
My question is: Does the vanishing of the Poisson bracket plays an important role in finding and proving Duflo's isomorphism theorem? Or it is just an literally first step?