The construction and engineering of artificial enzymes consisting of abiological catalytic moieties incorporated into protein scaffolds is a promising strategy to realize non-natural mechanisms in biocatalysis. Here, we show that incorporation of the noncanonical amino acid para-aminophenylalanine (pAF) into the nonenzymatic protein scaffold LmrR creates a proficient and stereoselective artificial enzyme (LmrR_pAF) for the vinylogous Friedel–Crafts alkylation between α,β-unsaturated aldehydes and indoles. pAF acts as a catalytic residue, activating enal substrates toward conjugate addition via the formation of intermediate iminium ion species, while the protein scaffold provides rate acceleration and stereoinduction. Improved LmrR_pAF variants were identified by low-throughput directed evolution advised by alanine-scanning to obtain a triple mutant that provided higher yields and enantioselectivities for a range of aliphatic enals and substituted indoles. Analysis of Michaelis–Menten kinetics of LmrR_pAF and evolved mutants reveals that different activities emerge via evolutionary pathways that diverge from one another and specialize catalytic reactivity. Translating this iminium-based catalytic mechanism into an enzymatic context will enable many more biocatalytic transformations inspired by organocatalysis.
Friedel-Crafts alkylation and acylation reactions are important methodologies in synthetic and industrial chemistry for the construction of aryl-alkyl and aryl-acyl linkages that are ubiquitous in bioactive molecules. Nature also exploits these reactions in many biosynthetic processes. Much work has been done to expand the synthetic application of these enzymes to unnatural substrates through directed evolution. The promise of such biocatalysts is their potential to supersede inefficient and toxic chemical approaches to these reactions, with mild operating conditions -the hallmark of enzymes. Complementary work has created many bio-hybrid Friedel-Crafts catalysts consisting of chemical catalysts anchored into biomolecular scaffolds, which display many of the same desirable characteristics. In this Review, we summarise these efforts, focussing on both mechanistic aspects and synthetic considerations, concluding with an overview of the frontiers of this field and routes towards more efficient and benign Friedel-Crafts reactions for the future of humankind.
The incorporation of organocatalysts into protein scaffolds holds the promise of overcoming some of the limitations of this powerful catalytic approach. Previously, we showed that incorporation of the non-canonical amino acid para-aminophenylalanine into the non-enzymatic protein scaffold LmrR forms a proficient and enantioselective artificial enzyme (LmrR_ pAF) for the Friedel-Crafts alkylation of indoles with enals. The unnatural aniline side-chain is directly involved in catalysis, operating via a well-known organocatalytic iminium-based mechanism. In this study, we show that LmrR_pAF can enantioselectively form tertiary carbon centres not only during CÀ C bond formation, but also by enantioselective protonation, delivering a proton to one face of a prochiral enamine intermediate. The importance of various side-chains in the pocket of LmrR is distinct from the Friedel-Crafts reaction without enantioselective protonation, and two particularly important residues were probed by exhaustive mutagenesis.
A series of tert-butyl-substituted pincer ligands based on 1,3-diaminobenzene and 3-aminophenol scaffolds, tBu4PXCYP (1e, X = Y = NH; 1f, X = NH; Y = O) and the corresponding iridium hydridochloro complexes (tBu4PXCYP)IrHCl (2e, X = Y = NH; 2f, X = NH; Y = O) were prepared with moderate yields and high purity and were fully characterized by 1H and 31P NMR spectroscopy. Unsymmetrical hybrid pincer ligands R2PNCOPtBu2 (1g, R = isopropyl; 1h, R = cyclohexyl) were prepared conveniently in high yield via a one-pot procedure by judiciously choosing reaction conditions and base; the corresponding iridium hydrido chloro complexes iPr2PNCOPtBu2IrHCl (2g) and Cy2PNCOPtBu2IrHCl (2h) were synthesized by the reaction of [IrCl(COE)2]2 with ligands. X-ray crystallography reveals that these iridium pincer complexes adopt similar square-pyramidal geometries and exhibit strong intermolecular hydrogen bonding between the NH linker and chloride ions of the adjacent iridium complex in the solid state. 1H NMR chemical shifts of tert-butyl based pincer ligated iridium hydrides move downfield when the electronegativity of the linker between the benzene backbone and phosphine moiety increases for 2a, 2e, 2f, and 2b. Accordingly the corresponding iridium pincer carbonyl complexes (tBu4PXCYP)Ir(CO), 3a, 3e, 3f, and 3b show a blue shift in the CO stretching frequency. The activities of iridium complexes containing NH linkers were briefly examined for transfer dehydrogenation from cyclooctane to tert-butylethylene; (iPr2PNCOPtBu2)IrHCl (2g) exhibits the highest activity among all tested iridium pincer complexes, including the most studied (tBu4PCP)IrHCl (2a) and (tBu4POCOP)IrHCl (2b). The enhanced catalytic activity could be related to combined electronic and steric effects of the NH/O hybrid linker and different alkyl groups at phosphorus. This new class of iridium pincer complexes could have great implications in catalytic transformation of polar compounds due to the strong hydrogen-bond-donating ability of the NH linker.
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