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1.
Science ; 382(6673): eadh8615, 2023 11 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37995253

ABSTRACT

Biocatalysis harnesses enzymes to make valuable products. This green technology is used in countless applications from bench scale to industrial production and allows practitioners to access complex organic molecules, often with fewer synthetic steps and reduced waste. The last decade has seen an explosion in the development of experimental and computational tools to tailor enzymatic properties, equipping enzyme engineers with the ability to create biocatalysts that perform reactions not present in nature. By using (chemo)-enzymatic synthesis routes or orchestrating intricate enzyme cascades, scientists can synthesize elaborate targets ranging from DNA and complex pharmaceuticals to starch made in vitro from CO2-derived methanol. In addition, new chemistries have emerged through the combination of biocatalysis with transition metal catalysis, photocatalysis, and electrocatalysis. This review highlights recent key developments, identifies current limitations, and provides a future prospect for this rapidly developing technology.


Subject(s)
Biocatalysis , Enzymes , Protein Engineering , Enzymes/chemistry , Enzymes/genetics , Methanol , Technology , Substrate Specificity
2.
Nature ; 485(7397): 185-94, 2012 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22575958

ABSTRACT

Over the past ten years, scientific and technological advances have established biocatalysis as a practical and environmentally friendly alternative to traditional metallo- and organocatalysis in chemical synthesis, both in the laboratory and on an industrial scale. Key advances in DNA sequencing and gene synthesis are at the base of tremendous progress in tailoring biocatalysts by protein engineering and design, and the ability to reorganize enzymes into new biosynthetic pathways. To highlight these achievements, here we discuss applications of protein-engineered biocatalysts ranging from commodity chemicals to advanced pharmaceutical intermediates that use enzyme catalysis as a key step.


Subject(s)
Biocatalysis , Enzymes/genetics , Enzymes/metabolism , Protein Engineering , Biotechnology/methods , Biotechnology/trends , Computational Biology/methods , Computational Biology/trends , Directed Molecular Evolution , Green Chemistry Technology , Protein Engineering/methods , Protein Engineering/trends
3.
J Org Chem ; 66(25): 8395-401, 2001 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11735517

ABSTRACT

Polar organic solvents such as methanol or N-methylformamide inactivate lipases. Although ionic liquids such as 3-alkyl-1-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborates have polarities similar to these polar organic solvents, they do not inactivate lipases. To get reliable lipase-catalyzed reactions in ionic liquids, we modified their preparation by adding a wash with aqueous sodium carbonate. Lipase-catalyzed reactions that previously did not occur in untreated ionic liquids now occur at rates comparable to those in nonpolar organic solvents such as toluene. Acetylation of 1-phenylethanol catalyzed by lipase from Pseudomonas cepacia (PCL) was as fast and as enantioselective in ionic liquids as in toluene. Ionic liquids permit reactions in a more polar solvent than previously possible. Acetylation of glucose catalyzed by lipase B from Candida antarctica (CAL-B) was more regioselective in ionic liquids because glucose is up to one hundred times more soluble in ionic liquids. Acetylation of insoluble glucose in organic solvents yielded the more soluble 6-O-acetyl glucose, which underwent further acetylation to give 3,6-O-diacetyl glucose (2-3:1 mixture). However, acetylation of glucose in ionic liquids yielded only 6-O-acetyl glucose (>13:1 and up to >50:1).


Subject(s)
Lipase/chemistry , Acylation , Burkholderia cepacia/chemistry , Candida/chemistry , Catalysis , Formamides/chemistry , Fungal Proteins , Glucose/chemistry , Imidazoles/chemistry , Ions , Methanol/chemistry , Pyridines/chemistry , Solvents , Stereoisomerism , Temperature
4.
J Org Chem ; 66(9): 3041-8, 2001 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11325269

ABSTRACT

2,3-Dihydro-3-(4'-hydroxyphenyl)-1,1,3-trimethyl-1H-inden-5-ol, 1, is a chiral bisphenol useful for preparation of polymers. Previous screening of commercial hydrolases identified lipase from Chromobacterium viscosum (CVL) as a highly regio- and enantioselective catalyst for hydrolysis of diesters of 1. The regioselectivity was > or =30:1 favoring the ester at the 5-position, while the enantioselectivity varied with acyl chain length, showing the highest enantioselectivity (E = 48 +/- 20 S) for the dibutanoate ester. In this paper, we use a combination of nonsymmetrical diesters and computer modeling to identify that the remote ester group controls the enantioselectivity. First, we prepared nonsymmetrical diesters of (+/-)-1 using another regioselective, but nonenantioselective, reaction. Lipase from Candida rugosa (CRL) showed the opposite regioselectivity (>30:1), allowing removal of the ester at the 4'-position (the remote ester in the CVL-catalyzed reaction). Regioselective hydrolysis of (+/-)-1-dibutanoate (150 g) gave (+/-)-1-5-dibutanoate (89 g, 71% yield). Acylation gave nonsymmetrical diesters that varied at the 4'-position. With no ester at the 4'-position, CVL showed no enantioselectivity, while hindered esters (3,3-dimethylbutanoate) reacted 20 times more slowly, but retained enantioselectivity (E = 22). These results indicate that the remote ester group can control the enantioselectivity. Computer modeling confirmed these results and provided molecular details. A model of a phosphonate transition state analogue fit easily in the active site of the open conformation of CVL. A large hydrophobic pocket tilts to one side above the catalytic machinery. The tilt permits the remote ester at the 4'-position of only the (S)-enantiomer to bind in this pocket. The butanoate ester fits and fills this pocket and shows high enantioselectivity. Both smaller and larger ester groups show low enantioselectivity because small ester groups cannot fill this pocket, while longer ester groups extend beyond the pocket. An improved large-scale resolution of 1-dibutanoate with CVL gave (R)-(+)-1-dibutanoate (269 g, 47% yield, 92% ee) and (S)-(-)-1-4'-monobutanoate (245 g, 52% yield, 89% ee). Methanolysis yielded (R)-(+)-1 (169 g, 40% overall yield, >97% ee) and (S)-(-)-1 (122 g, 36% overall yield, >96% ee).


Subject(s)
Chromobacterium/enzymology , Indans/chemistry , Lipase/chemistry , Phenols/chemistry , Hydrolysis , Indicators and Reagents , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Stereoisomerism , Substrate Specificity
5.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 4(1): 81-8, 2000 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10679382

ABSTRACT

Rapid advances in structural biology have revealed the three-dimensional structures of many biocatalysts. Molecular modeling is the tool that links these structures with experimental observations. As a qualitative tool, current modeling methods are extremely useful. They can explain, on a molecular level, unusual features of reactions. They can predict how to increase the selectivity either by substrate modification or by site-directed mutagenesis. Quantitative predictions, for example the degree of enantioselectivity, are still not reliable, however. Modeling is limited also by the availability of three-dimensional structures. Most current modeling involves hydrolases, especially proteases and lipases, but structures for other types of enzymes are starting to appear.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/metabolism , Catalysis , Lipase/genetics , Lipase/metabolism , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Stereoisomerism , Substrate Specificity , Thermodynamics
6.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 2(1): 121-6, 1998 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9667912

ABSTRACT

Improving hydrolases by site-directed mutagenesis continues to be important, but an alternative method - directed evolution - also gains favor. Directed evolution combines random mutagenesis with screening or selection for the desired property. Directed evolution is especially useful for cases like solvent tolerance or thermostability where current theories are inadequate to predict which structural changes will give improvement. Researchers have also recently made significant progress on several practical problems: how to maintain the high activity of proteases and lipases in nonpolar organic solvents, how to resolve amines, and how to efficiently recycle the unwanted enantiomer in kinetic resolutions. Besides the lipases and proteases, researchers are also developing new hydrolases, notably dehalogenases and epoxide hydrolases.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution , Hydrolases/chemical synthesis , Humans
7.
Trends Biotechnol ; 12(11): 464-72, 1994 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7765546

ABSTRACT

Organic chemists use lipases as catalysts in the synthesis of enantiomerically pure intermediates, to modify triglycerides, and to deprotect synthetic intermediates under mild conditions. They discovered most of these uses empirically, but the recent determination of the X-ray crystal structures of transition-state analogs bound to lipases may change this approach. These structures identified distinct binding regions for the acyl and alcohol portions of esters and suggested molecular-level explanations for the known enantiopreferences of lipases. In future, these structures may enable biotechnologists to design new substrates and reactions using molecular modeling, as well as to modify the activity and selectivity of lipases using site-directed mutagenesis.


Subject(s)
Lipase/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Biotechnology/trends , Catalysis , Crystallography, X-Ray , Esterases/metabolism , Humans , Lipase/chemistry , Lipase/genetics , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Engineering , Structure-Activity Relationship , Substrate Specificity
8.
Biochemistry ; 33(12): 3494-500, 1994 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8142346

ABSTRACT

The structures of Candida rugosa lipase-inhibitor complexes demonstrate that the scissile fatty acyl chain is bound in a narrow, hydrophobic tunnel which is unique among lipases studied to date. Modeling of triglyceride binding suggests that the bound lipid must adopt a "tuning fork" conformation. The complexes, analogs of tetrahedral intermediates of the acylation and deacylation steps of the reaction pathway, localize the components of the oxyanion hole and define the stereochemistry of ester hydrolysis. Comparison with other lipases suggests that the positioning of the scissile fatty acyl chain and ester bond and the stereochemistry of hydrolysis are the same in all lipases which share the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold.


Subject(s)
Candida/enzymology , Lipase/chemistry , Lipase/metabolism , Acylation , Anions , Binding Sites , Computer Simulation , Crystallization , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Lipase/antagonists & inhibitors , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Structure , Protein Conformation , Sulfonic Acids/metabolism , Triglycerides/metabolism
9.
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