Hydrogen-Driven Cofactor Regeneration for Stereoselective Whole-Cell C=C Bond Reduction in Cupriavidus necator.
Leen Assil-CompanioniSandy SchmidtPetra HeidingerHelmut SchwabAscensión Martínez-MárquezPublished in: ChemSusChem (2019)
The coupling of recombinantly expressed oxidoreductases to endogenous hydrogenases for cofactor recycling permits the omission of organic cosubstrates as sacrificial electron donors in whole-cell biotransformations. This increases atom efficiency and simplifies the reaction. A recombinant ene-reductase was expressed in the hydrogen-oxidizing proteobacterium Cupriavidus necator H16. In hydrogen-driven biotransformations, whole cells catalyzed asymmetric C=C bond reduction of unsaturated cyclic ketones with stereoselectivities up to >99 % enantiomeric excess. The use of hydrogen as a substrate for growth and cofactor regeneration is particularly attractive because it represents a strategy for improving atom efficiency and reducing side product formation associated with the recycling of organic cofactors.