1821-02-9Relevant articles and documents
Chemoenzymatic Production of Enantiocomplementary 2-Substituted 3-Hydroxycarboxylic Acids from l-α-Amino Acids
Pickl, Mathias,Marín-Valls, Roser,Joglar, Jesús,Bujons, Jordi,Clapés, Pere
, p. 2866 - 2876 (2021/04/14)
A two-enzyme cascade reaction plus in situ oxidative decarboxylation for the transformation of readily available canonical and non-canonical l-α-amino acids into 2-substituted 3-hydroxycarboxylic acid derivatives is described. The biocatalytic cascade consisted of an oxidative deamination of l-α-amino acids by an l-α-amino acid deaminase from Cosenzaea myxofaciens, rendering 2-oxoacid intermediates, with an ensuing aldol addition reaction to formaldehyde, catalyzed by metal-dependent (R)- or (S)-selective carboligases namely 2-oxo-3-deoxy-l-rhamnonate aldolase (YfaU) and ketopantoate hydroxymethyltransferase (KPHMT), respectively, furnishing 3-substituted 4-hydroxy-2-oxoacids. The overall substrate conversion was optimized by balancing biocatalyst loading and amino acid and formaldehyde concentrations, yielding 36–98% aldol adduct formation and 91–98% ee for each enantiomer. Subsequent in situ follow-up chemistry via hydrogen peroxide-driven oxidative decarboxylation afforded the corresponding 2-substituted 3-hydroxycarboxylic acid derivatives. (Figure presented.).
One-Pot Preparation of d-Amino Acids Through Biocatalytic Deracemization Using Alanine Dehydrogenase and Ω-Transaminase
Han, Sang-Woo,Shin, Jong-Shik
, p. 3678 - 3684 (2018/10/20)
d-Amino acids are pharmaceutically important building blocks, leading to a great deal of research efforts to develop cost-effective synthetic methods. Preparation of d-amino acids by deracemization has been conceptually attractive owing to facile synthesis of racemic amino acids by Strecker synthesis. Here, we demonstrated biocatalytic deracemization of aliphatic amino acids into d-enantiomers by running cascade reactions; (1) stereoinversion of l-amino acid to a d-form by amino acid dehydrogenase and ω-transaminase and (2) regeneration of NAD+ by NADH oxidase. Under the cascade reaction conditions containing 100?mM isopropylamine and 1?mM NAD+, complete deracemization of 100?mM dl-alanine was achieved after 24?h with 95% reaction yield of d-alanine (> 99% eeD, 52% isolation yield). Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
Efficient Enzymatic Preparation of13N-Labelled Amino Acids: Towards Multipurpose Synthetic Systems
da Silva, Eunice S.,Gómez-Vallejo, Vanessa,Baz, Zuri?e,Llop, Jordi,López-Gallego, Fernando
, p. 13619 - 13626 (2016/09/13)
Nitrogen-13 can be efficiently produced in biomedical cyclotrons in different chemical forms, and its stable isotopes are present in the majority of biologically active molecules. Hence, it may constitute a convenient alternative to Fluorine-18 and Carbon-11 for the preparation of positron-emitter-labelled radiotracers; however, its short half-life demands for the development of simple, fast, and efficient synthetic processes. Herein, we report the one-pot, enzymatic and non-carrier-added synthesis of the13N-labelled amino acids l-[13N]alanine, [13N]glycine, and l-[13N]serine by using l-alanine dehydrogenase from Bacillus subtilis, an enzyme that catalyses the reductive amination of α-keto acids by using nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) as the redox cofactor and ammonia as the amine source. The integration of both l-alanine dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase from Candida boidinii in the same reaction vessel to facilitate the in situ regeneration of NADH during the radiochemical synthesis of the amino acids allowed a 50-fold decrease in the concentration of the cofactor without compromising reaction yields. After optimization of the experimental conditions, radiochemical yields were sufficient to carry out in vivo imaging studies in small rodents.