Introduction of innovative biocatalytic processes offers great promise for applications in green chemistry. However, owing to limited catalytic performance, the enzymes harvested from nature's biodiversity often need to be improved for their desired functions by time-consuming iterative rounds of laboratory evolution. Here we describe the use of structure-based computational enzyme design to convert Bacillus sp. YM55-1 aspartase, an enzyme with a very narrow substrate scope, to a set of complementary hydroamination biocatalysts. The redesigned enzymes catalyze asymmetric addition of ammonia to substituted acrylates, affording enantiopure aliphatic, polar and aromatic β-amino acids that are valuable building blocks for the synthesis of pharmaceuticals and bioactive compounds. Without a requirement for further optimization by laboratory evolution, the redesigned enzymes exhibit substrate tolerance up to a concentration of 300 g/L, conversion up to 99%, β-regioselectivity >99% and product enantiomeric excess >99%. The results highlight the use of computational design to rapidly adapt an enzyme to industrially viable reactions.
Chiral nitriles and their derivatives are prevalent in pharmaceuticals and bioactive compounds. Enantioselective alkene hydrocyanation represents a convenient and efficient approach for synthesizing these molecules. However, a generally applicable method featuring a broad substrate scope and high functional group tolerance remains elusive. Here, we address this long-standing synthetic problem using an electrocatalytic strategy. Electrochemistry allows for the seamless combination of two classic radical reactions-cobalt-mediated hydrogen-atom transfer and copper-promoted radical cyanation-to accomplish highly enantioselective hydrocyanation without the need for stoichiometric oxidant. We harness electrochemistry's unique feature of precise potential control to optimize the chemoselectivity of challenging substrates. Computational analysis sheds light on the origin of enantioinduction, for which the chiral catalyst imparts a combination of attractive and repulsive non-covalent interactions that direct the enantio-determining C-CN bond formation. This discovery demonstrates the power of electrochemistry in accessing new chemical space and providing solutions to pertinent challenges in synthetic chemistry. File list (2) download file view on ChemRxiv 01_Lin_MS.pdf (1.70 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv 00_Lin_TOC.png (333.52 KiB)
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