143900-43-0Relevant articles and documents
Engineering an Alcohol Dehydrogenase from Kluyveromyces polyspora for Efficient Synthesis of Ibrutinib Intermediate
Wu, Yanfei,Zhou, Jieyu,Ni, Jie,Zhu, Cheng,Sun, Zewen,Xu, Guochao,Ni, Ye
, p. 332 - 340 (2022)
(S)-N-Boc-3-hydroxypiperidine [(S)-NBHP] is a key intermediate for the synthesis of mantle cell lymphoma drug, ibrutinib. Here, KpADH, an alcohol dehydrogenase from Kluyveromyces polyspora, exhibits evolutionary potential in the asymmetric reduction of N-Boc-3-piperidone (NBPO) to (S)-NBHP. By screening key residues in substrate binding pocket of KpADH, an excellent variant Y127W was obtained with 6-fold improved activity of 119.3 U mg?1, 1.8-fold enhanced half-life of 147 h and strict S-stereoselectivity (>99% ee). When catalyzed by Y127W, a complete conversion of 600 g L?1 NBPO was achieved at a substrate to catalyst ratio (S/C) of 30 in 10 h. Based on crystal-structure of Y127W, molecular docking and dynamic simulations reveal hydrogen bonds formed between W127 and Boc group of NBPO, as well as improved structural stability mainly contribute to the increased catalytic activity and stereoselectivity of Y127W. This study offers guidance for engineering ADHs for biosynthesis of chiral heterocyclic alcohols, and provides insights into mechanisms in catalytic activity and stereoselectivity toward carbonyl-containing heterocyclic substrates. (Figure presented.).
Development of a biocatalytic process to prepare (S)- N -boc-3-hydroxypiperidine
Ju, Xin,Tang, Yuanyuan,Liang, Xiaoliang,Hou, Maoqi,Wan, Zhonghui,Tao, Junhua
, p. 827 - 830 (2014)
(S)-N-Boc-3-hydroxypiperidine (S-NBHP) is a useful synthon for the synthesis of pharmaceutical intermediates including ibrutinib, the API of the newly approved drug Imbruvica, for the treatment of lymphoma. To our knowledge, there are no published biotransformation methods scalable to prepare S-NBHP. We report here the development of an efficient process catalyzed by recombinant ketoreductase (KRED) to reduce N-Boc-piperidin-3-one to obtain optically pure S-NBHP. The process has been optimized and demonstrated to have commercial potential with 100 g/L of substrate concentration, product of >99% ee with under 5% of enzyme loading (w/w).
Efficient Asymmetric Synthesis of Ethyl (S)-4-Chloro-3-hydroxybutyrate Using Alcohol Dehydrogenase SmADH31 with High Tolerance of Substrate and Product in a Monophasic Aqueous System
Chen, Rong,Liu, Qinghai,Wang, Hualei,Wei, Dongzhi,Xie, Youyu,Yang, Zeyu,Ye, Wenjie
, p. 1068 - 1076 (2020/07/06)
Bioreductions catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs) play an important role in the synthesis of chiral alcohols. However, the synthesis of ethyl (S)-4-chloro-3-hydroxybutyrate [(S)-CHBE], an important drug intermediate, has significant challenges concerning high substrate or product inhibition toward ADHs, which complicates its production. Herein, we evaluated a novel ADH, SmADH31, obtained from the Stenotrophomonas maltophilia genome, which can tolerate extremely high concentrations (6 M) of both substrate and product. The coexpression of SmADH31 and glucose dehydrogenase from Bacillus subtilis in Escherichia coli meant that as much as 660 g L-1 (4.0 M) ethyl 4-chloroacetoacetate was completely converted into (S)-CHBE in a monophasic aqueous system with a >99.9% ee value and a high space-time yield (2664 g L-1 d-1). Molecular dynamics simulation shed light on the high activity and stereoselectivity of SmADH31. Moreover, five other optically pure chiral alcohols were synthesized at high concentrations (100-462 g L-1) as a result of the broad substrate spectrum of SmADH31. All these compounds act as important drug intermediates, demonstrating the industrial potential of SmADH31-mediated bioreductions.
Methodology Development in Directed Evolution: Exploring Options when Applying Triple-Code Saturation Mutagenesis
Qu, Ge,Lonsdale, Richard,Yao, Peiyuan,Li, Guangyue,Liu, Beibei,Reetz, Manfred T.,Sun, Zhoutong
, p. 239 - 246 (2018/02/09)
Directed evolution of stereo- or regioselective enzymes as catalysts in asymmetric transformations is of particular interest in organic synthesis. Upon evolving these biocatalysts, screening is the bottleneck. To beat the numbers problem most effectively, methods and strategies for building “small but smart” mutant libraries have been developed. Herein, we compared two different strategies regarding the application of triple-code saturation mutagenesis (TCSM) at multiresidue sites of the Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase by using distinct reduced amino-acid alphabets. By using the synthetically difficult-to-reduce prochiral ketone tetrahydrofuran-3-one as a substrate, highly R- and S-selective variants were obtained (92–99 % ee) with minimal screening. The origin of stereoselectivity was provided by molecular dynamics analyses, which is discussed in terms of the Bürgi–Dunitz trajectory.