4 research outputs found
Chemoenzymatic Hunsdiecker-Type Decarboxylative Bromination of Cinnamic Acids
In this contribution,
we report chemoenzymatic bromodecarboxylation
(Hunsdiecker-type) of α,ß-unsaturated carboxylic acids.
The extraordinarily robust chloroperoxidase from Curvularia
inaequalis (CiVCPO) generated hypobromite
from H2O2 and bromide, which then spontaneously
reacted with a broad range of unsaturated carboxylic acids and yielded
the corresponding vinyl bromide products. Selectivity issues arising
from the (here undesired) addition of water to the intermediate bromonium
ion could be solved by reaction medium engineering. The vinyl bromides
so obtained could be used as starting materials for a range of cross-coupling
and pericyclic reactions
Chemoenzymatic Halocyclization of 4‑Pentenoic Acid at Preparative Scale
The scale-up of chemoenzymatic
bromolactonization to 100 g scale
is presented, together with an identification of current limitations.
The preparative-scale reaction also allowed for meaningful mass balances
identifying current bottlenecks of the chemoenzymatic reaction
Selective Synthesis of the Human Drug Metabolite 5′-Hydroxypropranolol by an Evolved Self-Sufficient Peroxygenase
Propranolol
is a widely used beta-blocker that is metabolized by
human liver P450 monooxygenases into equipotent hydroxylated human
drug metabolites (HDMs). It is paramount for the pharmaceutical industry
to evaluate the toxicity and activity of these metabolites, but unfortunately,
their synthesis has hitherto involved the use of severe conditions,
with poor reaction yields and unwanted byproducts. Unspecific peroxygenases
(UPOs) catalyze the selective oxyfunctionalization of C–H bonds,
and they are of particular interest in synthetic organic chemistry.
Here, we describe the engineering of UPO from Agrocybe aegerita for the efficient synthesis of 5′-hydroxypropranolol (5′-OHP).
We employed a structure-guided evolution approach combined with computational
analysis, with the aim of avoiding unwanted phenoxyl radical coupling
without having to dope the reaction with radical scavengers. The evolved
biocatalyst showed a catalytic efficiency enhanced by 2 orders of
magnitude and 99% regioselectivity for the synthesis of 5′-OHP.
When the UPO mutant was combined with an H2O2 in situ generation system using methanol as sacrificial electron
donor, total turnover numbers of up to 264 000 were achieved,
offering a cost-effective and readily scalable method to rapidly prepare
5′-OHP
A Biocatalytic Aza-Achmatowicz Reaction
A catalytic,
enzyme-initiated (aza-) Achmatowicz reaction is presented.
The involvement of a robust vanadium-dependent peroxidase from <i>Curvularia inaequalis</i> allows the simple use of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> and catalytic amounts of bromide
