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Engineered Cytochrome c-Catalyzed Lactone-Carbene B-H Insertion.

Kai ChenXiongyi HuangShuo-Qing ZhangAndrew Z ZhouS B Jennifer KanXin HongFrances H Arnold
Published in: Synlett : accounts and rapid communications in synthetic organic chemistry (2019)
Previous work has demonstrated that variants of a heme protein, Rhodothermus marinus cytochrome c (Rma cyt c), catalyze abiological carbene boron-hydrogen (B-H) bond insertion with high efficiency and selectivity. Here we investigated this carbon-boron bondforming chemistry with cyclic, lactone-based carbenes. Using directed evolution, we obtained a Rma cyt c variant BOR LAC that shows high selectivity and efficiency for B-H insertion of 5- and 6-membered lactone carbenes (up to 24,500 total turnovers and 97.1:2.9 enantiomeric ratio). The enzyme shows low activity with a 7-membered lactone carbene. Computational studies revealed a highly twisted geometry of the 7membered lactone carbene intermediate relative to 5- and 6-membered ones. Directed evolution of cytochrome c together with computational characterization of key iron-carbene intermediates has allowed us to expand the scope of enzymatic carbene B-H insertion to produce new lactone-based organoborons.
Keyphrases
  • high efficiency
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • room temperature
  • nitric oxide
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • small molecule
  • binding protein
  • amino acid
  • visible light
  • high speed
  • capillary electrophoresis