C O M M U N I C A T I O N S
Scheme 3
Figure 1. (A) Brønsted plots for the hydrolysis of SP- (b) and RP-
enantiomers (O) for compounds 1-8 with wild-type PTE. (B) Stereo-
selectivity for the enzymatic hydrolysis of compounds 1-8, plotted as the
ratio of kcat/Km as a function of the pKa of the leaving group phenol.
methoxy and ethoxy substituents attached to the phosphorus core.
With p-nitrophenol as the leaving group, no selectivity was observed
with the wild-type enzyme, and a modest stereoselectivity was
observed with the G60A mutant.6 Racemic mixtures of 9-12 were
prepared,11 and the time courses for hydrolysis catalyzed by wild-
type PTE and the mutant G60A were obtained spectrophotometri-
cally (Scheme 3). No stereoselectivity was observed with the wild-
type enzyme for any of the leaving groups tested. However, with
the G60A mutant, the stereoselectivity increased from an initial
value of 11 for compound 9 to ratios of 27, 58, and 55 for
compounds 10, 11, and 12, respectively.
In this Communication, we have demonstrated that the stereo-
selectivity of the native phosphotriesterase can be systematically
manipulated by alteration of the pKa value of the leaving group
phenol. For the wild-type enzyme, the stereoselectivity has been
enhanced in excess of 3 orders of magnitude. We are unaware of
previous reports that document the control of enzyme stereoselec-
tivity via systematic alteration in the reaction coordinate profile.
This result enhances the utility of this enzyme toward the prepara-
tion of chiral phosphorus building blocks that are difficult to obtain
by other means.
Figure 2. (A) Brønsted plots for the hydrolysis of SP- (b) and RP-
enantiomers (O) for compounds 1-8 with G60A mutant enzyme. (B)
Stereoselectivity for the enzymatic hydrolysis of compounds 1-8, plotted
as the ratio of kcat/Km as a function of the pKa of the leaving group phenol.
ogy, the RP-enantiomer of 6 was isolated on a preparative scale.
Wild-type PTE (0.023 mg in 0.032 mL of HEPES buffer) was added
to a solution of racemic 6 (1.084 g) in CH3CN (100 mL) and water
(250 mL). The hydrolysis reaction was monitored by following the
change in absorbance at 322 nm. The initial phase of the reaction
was complete in 90 min, and the reaction was quenched by the
addition of 200 mL of CHCl3. Chromatography on silica gel
provided the RP-enantiomer of 6 in 98% isolated yield. The
enantiomeric excess (ee) was quantitated by chiral electrophoresis
and found to be greater than 99%.10
Acknowledgment. This work was supported in part by the NIH
(GM 33894) and the Advanced Technology Program of the State
of Texas. We thank Brent Busby in the laboratory of Professor
Gyula Vigh for his assistance with the chiral electrophoresis.
A comparable Brønsted analysis using the G60A mutant of
PTE was conducted to ascertain the general applicability of stereo-
selective control during the hydrolysis of racemic organophosphorus
mixtures. The G60A mutant of PTE reduces the dimensions of the
active site by a single methylene group.5b This mutant has been
previously shown to enhance the stereoselectivity during the
hydrolysis of organophosphate racemates by substantially reducing
the overall rate of hydrolysis of the slower enantiomer.5,6 The overall
effect of changing the pKa of the leaving group on kcat/Km for the
series of racemic mixtures 1-8 is presented in Figure 2A. The
general trends are similar to those observed for the wild-type
enzyme. For the SP-enantiomer, there is a change in the rate-limiting
step as the pKa of the leaving group exceeds 8. However, the RP-
enantiomers are all limited by P-O bond cleavage and are
significantly slower substrates relative to their SP-counterparts. There
is a stereoselective advantage of approximately 3 orders of
magnitude for those substrates with leaving groups of very low
pKa that rises in excess of 100 000:1 when the pKa approaches 8
(Figure 2B). For hydrolysis of the RP-enantiomers with either the
wild-type or the G60A mutant, the absolute value of the â-value is
smaller than that for the SP-enantiomers. This observation suggests
that there is less net negative charge in the transition state for the
RP-enantiomers.
Supporting Information Available: Experimental details (PDF).
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://
pubs.acs.org.
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The most difficult kinetic resolution attempted thus far with this
system has involved the stereochemical discrimination between
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