169383-17-9Relevant articles and documents
Single-Biocatalyst Synthesis of Enantiopure d-Arylalanines Exploiting an Engineered d-Amino Acid Dehydrogenase
Parmeggiani, Fabio,Ahmed, Syed T.,Thompson, Matthew P.,Weise, Nicholas J.,Galman, James L.,Gahloth, Deepankar,Dunstan, Mark S.,Leys, David,Turner, Nicholas J.
, p. 3298 - 3306 (2016)
A practical and efficient biocatalytic synthesis of aromatic d-amino acids has been developed, based on the reductive amination of the corresponding α-keto acids via a recombinant whole cell system composed of an engineered dehydrogenase and cofactor recycling apparatus. The reaction was shown to give excellent enantioselectivity (≥98%) and good yields at the preparative scale across a broad range of substrates. Additionally, the structure of the variant enzyme was solved to allow rationalisation of the observed reaction rates. The engineered whole cell catalyst was also used to mediate the production of d-phenylalanine derivatives from racemic mixtures and cheaper l-amino acids by combining it with an enantiocomplementary deaminase. (Figure presented.).
One-Pot Enzymatic Synthesis of d-Arylalanines Using Phenylalanine Ammonia Lyase and l-Amino Acid Deaminase
Zhu, Longbao,Feng, Guoqiang,Ge, Fei,Song, Ping,Wang, Taotao,Liu, Yi,Tao, Yugui,Zhou, Zhemin
, p. 1 - 15 (2018/06/11)
The phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (AvPAL) from Anabaena variabilis catalyzes the amination of substituent trans-cinnamic acid (t-CA) to produce racemic d,l-enantiomer arylalanine mixture owing to its low stereoselectivity. To produce high optically pure d-arylalanine, a modified AvPAL with high d-selectivity is expected. Based on the analyses of catalytic mechanism and structure, the Asn347 residue in the active site was proposed to control stereoselectivity. Therefore, Asn347 was mutated to construct mutant AvPAL-N347A, the stereoselectivity of AvPAL-N347A for d-enantiomer arylalanine was 2.3-fold higher than that of wild-type AvPAL (WtPAL). Furthermore, the residual l-enantiomer product in reaction solution could be converted into the d-enantiomer product through stereoselective oxidation by PmLAAD and nonselective reduction by reducing agent NH3BH3. At optimal conditions, the conversion rate of t-CA and optical purity (enantiomeric excess (eeD)) of d-phenylalanine reached 82% and exceeded 99%, respectively. The two enzymes displayed activity toward a broad range of substrate and could be used to efficiently synthesize d-arylalanine with different groups on the phenyl ring. Among these d-arylalanines, the yield of m-nitro-d-phenylalanine was highest and reached 96%, and the eeD exceeded 99%. This one-pot synthesis using AvPAL and PmLAAD has prospects for industrial application.
The bacterial ammonia lyase EncP: A tunable biocatalyst for the synthesis of unnatural amino acids
Weise, Nicholas J.,Parmeggiani, Fabio,Ahmed, Syed T.,Turner, Nicholas J.
supporting information, p. 12977 - 12983 (2015/10/28)
Enzymes of the class I lyase-like family catalyze the asymmetric addition of ammonia to arylacrylates, yielding high value amino acids as products. Recent examples include the use of phenylalanine ammonia lyases (PALs), either alone or as a gateway to deracemization cascades (giving (S)- or (R)-α-phenylalanine derivatives, respectively), and also eukaryotic phenylalanine aminomutases (PAMs) for the synthesis of the (R)-β-products. Herein, we present the investigation of another family member, EncP from Streptomyces maritimus, thereby expanding the biocatalytic toolbox and enabling the production of the missing (S)-β-isomer. EncP was found to convert a range of arylacrylates to a mixture of (S)-α- and (S)-β-arylalanines, with regioselectivity correlating to the strength of electron-withdrawing/-donating groups on the ring of each substrate. The low regioselectivity of the wild-type enzyme was addressed via structure-based rational design to generate three variants with altered preference for either α- or β-products. By examining various biocatalyst/substrate combinations, it was demonstrated that the amination pattern of the reaction could be tuned to achieve selectivities between 99:1 and 1:99 for β:α-product ratios as desired.