The asymmetric bioreduction of a library of β-cyanoacrylate
esters using ene-reductases was studied with the aim to provide a
biocatalytic route to precursors for GABA analogues, such as pregabalin.
The stereochemical outcome could be controlled by substrate-engineering
through size-variation of the ester moiety and by employing stereochemically
pure (E)- or (Z)-isomers, which
allowed to access both enantiomers of each product in up to quantitative
conversion in enantiomerically pure form. In addition, stereoselectivities
and conversions could be improved by mutant variants of OPR1, and
the utility of the system was demonstrated by preparative-scale applications.
Rhodium catalyzed O-H insertion reactions employing α-diazophosphonate 20 with appropriately protected thymidine, uridine, cytosine, adenosine and guanosine derivatives leads to novel 5'-phosphononucleoside derivatives. Deprotection led to a novel series of phosphono derivatives bearing a carboxylic acid moiety adjacent to the phosphonate group with potential antiviral and/or anticancer activity. The phosphononucleosides bearing an α-carboxylic acid group are envisaged as potential diphosphate mimics. Conversion to mono- and diphosphorylated phosphononucleosides has been effected for evaluation as nucleoside triphosphate mimics. Most of the novel phosphononucleosides proved to be inactive against a variety of DNA and RNA viruses. Only the phosphono AZT derivatives 56-59 showed weak activity against HIV-1 and HIV-2.
This
publication describes the evaluation of four synthetic routes
to the advanced pregabalin (Lyrica) intermediate 7. Asymmetric
reduction of (E)-7 with an ene-reductase
(OPR1 from Lycopersicon esculentum)
gave a saturated cyanoester intermediate 5 with the desired S stereocenter in >99% ee. OPR1 also catalyzed the reduction
of (Z)-7 to (S)-5, but with lower conversion and selectivity.
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