Chemoenzymatic Route to Oxyfunctionalized Cembranoids Facilitated by Substrate and Protein Engineering.
Priska Le-HuuDominik RekowClaudia KrügerAnsgar BokelTanja HeidtSebastian SchaubachBirgit ClaasenSebastian HölzelWolfgang FreySabine LaschatVlada B UrlacherPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2018)
Cembranoids constitute a large family of 14-membered oxygenated macrocyclic diterpenoids with potential as therapeutic agents. Selective late-stage oxidations of cembranoid scaffolds remain a challenge for chemical catalysts but can be accomplished by enzymes. Here, a new chemoenzymatic route to oxyfunctionalized 14-membered macrocycles including cembranoids is described. This route combines a metal-catalyzed ring-closing metathesis with a subsequent P450 BM3-catalyzed hydroxylation and delivers cembranoid-like analogues. Systematic substrate probing with a set of synthetic 14-membered macrocycles revealed that the regioselectivity of a P450 BM3-based biocatalyst increased with increasing ring rigidity as well as size and polarity of the exocyclic substituents. Enzyme regioselectivity could further be improved by first-sphere active site mutagenesis. The V78A/F87A variant catalyzed hydroxylation of cembranoid-ol (9S/R)-3 d with 90 % regioselectivity for C5 position. Extensive NMR analysis of Mosher esters and single crystal X-ray structure determination revealed a remarkable diastereoselectivity of this P450 BM3 mutant depending on substrate stereochemistry, which led exclusively to the syn-cembranoid-diols (5S,9S)-4 and (5R,9R)-4.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- amino acid
- high resolution
- single cell
- magnetic resonance
- structural basis
- solid state
- crispr cas
- single molecule
- molecular dynamics simulations
- highly efficient
- protein protein
- solid phase extraction
- ionic liquid
- risk assessment
- dual energy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- tissue engineering
- transition metal
- wild type
- contrast enhanced