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1.
ACS Cent Sci ; 5(6): 1010-1016, 2019 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31263760

ABSTRACT

Biocatalysts have the potential to perform reactions with exceptional selectivity and high catalytic efficiency while utilizing safe and sustainable reagents. Despite these positive attributes, the utility of a biocatalyst can be limited by the breadth of substrates that can be accommodated in the active site in a reactive pose. Proven strategies exist for optimizing the performance of a biocatalyst toward unnatural substrates, including protein engineering; however, these methods can be time intensive and require specialized equipment that renders these approaches inaccessible to synthetic chemists. Strategies accessible to chemists for the expansion of a natural enzyme's substrate scope, while maintaining high levels of site- and stereoselectivity, remain elusive. Here, we employ a computationally guided substrate engineering strategy to expand the synthetic utility of a flavin-dependent monooxygenase. Specifically, experimental observations and computational modeling led to the identification of a critical interaction between the substrate and protein which is responsible for orienting the substrate in a pose productive for catalysis. The fundamental hypothesis for this positioning group strategy is supported by binding and kinetic assays as well as computational studies with a panel of compounds. Further, incorporation of this positioning group into substrates through a cleavable ester linkage transformed compounds not oxidized by the biocatalyst SorbC into substrates efficiently oxidatively dearomatized by the wild-type enzyme with the highest levels of site- and stereoselectivity known for this transformation.

2.
Org Lett ; 18(24): 6360-6363, 2016 12 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27978639

ABSTRACT

A nontraditional approach to synthesizing aryl vinyl sulfides is described. 2,2-Diphenyl-1,3-oxathiolane slowly liberates a vinyl sulfide anion under basic conditions. Using a Pd/Xantphos catalyst system to activate a wide range of aryl bromides, this transient sulfide species can be effectively trapped and fed into a traditional Pd0/PdII catalytic cycle. Scope and limitations of the methodology are presented along with significant discussion of a competitive C-S bond activation by this catalyst system.

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