Improved Cyclopropanation Activity of Histidine‐Ligated Cytochrome P450 Enables the Enantioselective Formal Synthesis of Levomilnacipran |
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Authors: | Dr Z Jane Wang Dr Hans Renata Nicole E Peck Christopher C Farwell Dr Pedro S Coelho Prof?Dr Frances H Arnold |
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Institution: | Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd. MC 210‐41, Pasadena, CA 91125 (USA) |
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Abstract: | Engineering enzymes capable of modes of activation unprecedented in nature will increase the range of industrially important molecules that can be synthesized through biocatalysis. However, low activity for a new function is often a limitation in adopting enzymes for preparative‐scale synthesis, reaction with demanding substrates, or when a natural substrate is also present. By mutating the proximal ligand and other key active‐site residues of the cytochrome P450 enzyme from Bacillus megaterium (P450‐BM3), a highly active His‐ligated variant of P450‐BM3 that can be employed for the enantioselective synthesis of the levomilnacipran core was engineered. This enzyme, BM3‐Hstar, catalyzes the cyclopropanation of N,N‐diethyl‐2‐phenylacrylamide with an estimated initial rate of over 1000 turnovers per minute and can be used under aerobic conditions. Cyclopropanation activity is highly dependent on the electronic properties of the P450 proximal ligand, which can be used to tune this non‐natural enzyme activity. |
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Keywords: | biocatalysis cyclopropanation cytochrome P450 enzymes protein engineering |
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