374898-01-8Relevant articles and documents
Iterative Alanine Scanning Mutagenesis Confers Aromatic Ketone Specificity and Activity of L-Amine Dehydrogenases
Mu, Xiaoqing,Wu, Tao,Mao, Yong,Zhao, Yilei,Xu, Yan,Nie, Yao
, p. 5243 - 5253 (2021/11/16)
Direct reductive amination of prochiral ketones catalyzed by amine dehydrogenases is attractive in the synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients. Here, we report the protein engineering of L-Bacillus cereus amine dehydrogenase to allow reactivity on synthetically useful aromatic ketone substrates using an iterative, multiple-site alanine scanning mutagenesis approach. Mutagenesis libraries based on molecular docking, iterative alanine scanning, and double-proximity filter approach significantly expand the scope of active pharmaceutical ingredients relevant building blocks. The eventual quintuple mutant (A115G/T136A/L42A/V296A/V293A) showed reactivity toward aromatic ketones 12 a (5-phenyl-pentan-2-one) and 13 a (6-phenyl-hexan-2-one), which have not been reported to serve as targets of reductive amination by currently available amine dehydrogenases. Docking simulation and tunnel analysis provided valuable insights into the source of the acquired specificity and activity.
Enantioselective Bioamination of Aromatic Alkanes Using Ammonia: A Multienzymatic Cascade Approach
Chen, Fei-Fei,Wang, Hui,Xu, Jian-He,Yu, Hui-Lei,Zheng, Yu-Cong
, (2020/03/10)
Chiral amines are common drug building blocks and important active pharmaceutical ingredients. Preparing these functionalized compounds from simple materials, such as alkanes, is of great interest. We recently developed an artificial bioamination cascade for the C?H amination of cyclic alkanes by combining P450 monooxygenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, and amine dehydrogenase. Herein, this system has been extended to the synthesis of chiral aromatic amines. In the first hydroxylation step, process optimization increased the conversion to 77 %. Two stereoselectively complementary alcohol dehydrogenases and an amine dehydrogenase were selected for the bioconversion of aromatic hydrocarbons to amines. The amination reaction was optimized with respect to cofactor addition and enzyme dosage. Isopropanol was added to decrease ketone intermediate accumulation in the amination step, which further enhanced the overall conversion. This cascade system converted a panel of hydrocarbon substrates into the corresponding amines with excellent optical purity (>99 % ee) and moderate conversion ratios (13–53 %).
Generation of amine dehydrogenases with increased catalytic performance and substrate scope from ε-deaminating L-Lysine dehydrogenase
Tseliou, Vasilis,Knaus, Tanja,Masman, Marcelo F.,Corrado, Maria L.,Mutti, Francesco G.
, (2019/08/22)
Amine dehydrogenases (AmDHs) catalyse the conversion of ketones into enantiomerically pure amines at the sole expense of ammonia and hydride source. Guided by structural information from computational models, we create AmDHs that can convert pharmaceutically relevant aromatic ketones with conversions up to quantitative and perfect chemical and optical purities. These AmDHs are created from an unconventional enzyme scaffold that apparently does not operate any asymmetric transformation in its natural reaction. Additionally, the best variant (LE-AmDH-v1) displays a unique substrate-dependent switch of enantioselectivity, affording S- or R-configured amine products with up to >99.9% enantiomeric excess. These findings are explained by in silico studies. LE-AmDH-v1 is highly thermostable (Tm of 69 °C), retains almost entirely its catalytic activity upon incubation up to 50 °C for several days, and operates preferentially at 50 °C and pH 9.0. This study also demonstrates that product inhibition can be a critical factor in AmDH-catalysed reductive amination.