Engineering Dirhodium Artificial Metalloenzymes for Diazo Coupling Cascade Reactions
Engineering Dirhodium Artificial Metalloenzymes for Diazo Coupling Cascade Reactions
Artificial metalloenzymes (ArMs) are now commonly used to control the stereoselectivity of catalytic reactions, but controlling ArM chemoselectivity remains challenging. In this study, we engineer a dirhodium ArM to catalyze diazo cross-coupling to form an alkene that, in a one-pot cascade reaction, is reduced to an alkane with high enantioselectivity (typically >99% e.e.) by an alkene reductase. The numerous protein and small molecule components required for the cascade reaction had minimal effect on ArM catalysis, while the dirhodium cofactor itself provided only O-H insertion products from reaction with water and glucose under the same conditions. Directed evolution of the ArM led to improved yields and E/Z selectivities for a variety of substrates, which translated well to cascade reaction yields. MD simulations of ArM variants were used to understand the structural role of the cofactor on large-scale scaffold structural dynamics. These results highlight the ability of ArMs to control both catalyst stereoselectivity and chemoselectivity to enable reactions in complex media that would otherwise lead to undesired side reactions.
Ying Li、Maxwell J. Bultman、Jared C. Lewis、Rui Huang、David M. Upp、Beno?t Roux
Ying LiMaxwell J. BultmanJared C. LewisRui HuangDavid M. UppBeno?t Roux
生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术生物化学生物工程学
Artificial Metalloenzymesdirhodium catalysisDirected Evolutioncascade catalysis
Ying Li,Maxwell J. Bultman,Jared C. Lewis,Rui Huang,David M. Upp,Beno?t Roux.Engineering Dirhodium Artificial Metalloenzymes for Diazo Coupling Cascade Reactions[EB/OL].(2021-06-14)[2025-06-30].https://chemrxiv.org/engage/chemrxiv/article-details/60c9e3b1551c4f6c67c4c30a.点此复制
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