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Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species

[Image: see text] The aerobic oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls is an important and challenging transformation in synthesis. Recently, a new P450-based enzyme (aMOx) has been evolved in the laboratory to directly oxidize styrenes to their corresponding aldehydes with high activity and selectivity. T...

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Autores principales: Soler, Jordi, Gergel, Sebastian, Klaus, Cindy, Hammer, Stephan C., Garcia-Borràs, Marc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9460782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35998887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c02567
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author Soler, Jordi
Gergel, Sebastian
Klaus, Cindy
Hammer, Stephan C.
Garcia-Borràs, Marc
author_facet Soler, Jordi
Gergel, Sebastian
Klaus, Cindy
Hammer, Stephan C.
Garcia-Borràs, Marc
author_sort Soler, Jordi
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The aerobic oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls is an important and challenging transformation in synthesis. Recently, a new P450-based enzyme (aMOx) has been evolved in the laboratory to directly oxidize styrenes to their corresponding aldehydes with high activity and selectivity. The enzyme utilizes a heme-based, high-valent iron-oxo species as a catalytic oxidant that normally epoxidizes alkenes, similar to other catalysts. How the evolved aMOx enzyme suppresses the commonly preferred epoxidation and catalyzes direct carbonyl formation is currently not well understood. Here, we combine computational modelling together with mechanistic experiments to study the reaction mechanism and unravel the molecular basis behind the selectivity achieved by aMOx. Our results describe that although both pathways are energetically accessible diverging from a common covalent radical intermediate, intrinsic dynamic effects determine the strong preference for epoxidation. We discovered that aMOx overrides these intrinsic preferences by controlling the accessible conformations of the covalent radical intermediate. This disfavors epoxidation and facilitates the formation of a carbocation intermediate that generates the aldehyde product through a fast 1,2-hydride migration. Electrostatic preorganization of the enzyme active site also contributes to the stabilization of the carbocation intermediate. Computations predicted that the hydride migration is stereoselective due to the enzymatic conformational control over the intermediate species. These predictions were corroborated by experiments using deuterated styrene substrates, which proved that the hydride migration is cis- and enantioselective. Our results demonstrate that directed evolution tailored a highly specific active site that imposes strong steric control over key fleeting biocatalytic intermediates, which is essential for accessing the carbonyl forming pathway and preventing competing epoxidation.
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spelling pubmed-94607822022-09-10 Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species Soler, Jordi Gergel, Sebastian Klaus, Cindy Hammer, Stephan C. Garcia-Borràs, Marc J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] The aerobic oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls is an important and challenging transformation in synthesis. Recently, a new P450-based enzyme (aMOx) has been evolved in the laboratory to directly oxidize styrenes to their corresponding aldehydes with high activity and selectivity. The enzyme utilizes a heme-based, high-valent iron-oxo species as a catalytic oxidant that normally epoxidizes alkenes, similar to other catalysts. How the evolved aMOx enzyme suppresses the commonly preferred epoxidation and catalyzes direct carbonyl formation is currently not well understood. Here, we combine computational modelling together with mechanistic experiments to study the reaction mechanism and unravel the molecular basis behind the selectivity achieved by aMOx. Our results describe that although both pathways are energetically accessible diverging from a common covalent radical intermediate, intrinsic dynamic effects determine the strong preference for epoxidation. We discovered that aMOx overrides these intrinsic preferences by controlling the accessible conformations of the covalent radical intermediate. This disfavors epoxidation and facilitates the formation of a carbocation intermediate that generates the aldehyde product through a fast 1,2-hydride migration. Electrostatic preorganization of the enzyme active site also contributes to the stabilization of the carbocation intermediate. Computations predicted that the hydride migration is stereoselective due to the enzymatic conformational control over the intermediate species. These predictions were corroborated by experiments using deuterated styrene substrates, which proved that the hydride migration is cis- and enantioselective. Our results demonstrate that directed evolution tailored a highly specific active site that imposes strong steric control over key fleeting biocatalytic intermediates, which is essential for accessing the carbonyl forming pathway and preventing competing epoxidation. American Chemical Society 2022-08-23 2022-09-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9460782/ /pubmed/35998887 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c02567 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Soler, Jordi
Gergel, Sebastian
Klaus, Cindy
Hammer, Stephan C.
Garcia-Borràs, Marc
Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title_full Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title_fullStr Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title_full_unstemmed Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title_short Enzymatic Control over Reactive Intermediates Enables Direct Oxidation of Alkenes to Carbonyls by a P450 Iron-Oxo Species
title_sort enzymatic control over reactive intermediates enables direct oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls by a p450 iron-oxo species
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9460782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35998887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c02567
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