html5-img
1 / 41

Biotransforma tions in organic chemistry

Biotransforma tions in organic chemistry. History of biotransformations. wine and beer fermentation 6000 B.C. Summer, Babylon bread 4000 B. C. Egypt Industrial production of fine chemicals: L-Lactic acid 1880 USA. Biotransformation in chiral separation. Pasteur 1858.

enrico
Télécharger la présentation

Biotransforma tions in organic chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Biotransformations in organic chemistry

  2. History of biotransformations • wine and beer fermentation 6000 B.C. Summer, Babylon • bread 4000 B. C. Egypt • Industrial production of fine chemicals: • L-Lactic acid 1880 USA

  3. Biotransformation in chiral separation Pasteur 1858

  4. Industrial production of efedrine 1921 Industrial production of ascorbic acid 1924

  5. Biotransformations • tissue cell cultures (plant cells) • whole cells (bacteria, yeast) • immobilized cells • cell extracts • isolated native enzymes • recombinant enzymes • modified/mutated enzymes • stabilized enzymes (cross-linking) • immobilized enzymes/multi-enzyme systems

  6. Advantages of enzymatically catalyzed reactions • high reaction specificity • high regioselectivity • high stereoselectivity (enantioselectivity, diastereoselectivity) • good efficiency (high turnover) • mild reaction conditions • environmental friendly (green) processes For most organic reactions there are some enzymes that efficiently catalyze them; if not, artificial enzymes could be developed by in vitro evolution. Enzymes catalyze reverse reactions.

  7. Disadvantages and problems of biotransformations • sensitivity to harsh reaction conditions (low or high temperatures, pressure, pH, reagents) • high prices of many enzymes • problematic co-factor regeneration (multi-enzyme systems) • low conversions in some reactions (inhibition by the product) • narrow substrate specificity of some enzymes • limited use of non-aqueous solvents • high dilutions (low volume efficiency) Enzymes only lower activation barrier (accelerate reactions) – they do not influence reaction balance!!!

  8. Chirality

  9. Enzymes in productions of enantiopure chiral compounds

  10. Enzymes

  11. Oxidoreductases

  12. Oxidoreductases

  13. OXIDATIONS

  14. REDUCTIONS

  15. Stereo- and regiospecific hydroxylation of non-activated CH peroxidases, monoxygenases

  16. Oxidative deaminations/reductive aminations

  17. TRANSFERASES OR LIGASES used mostly for phosphorylations

  18. Enzymatic phosphorylations

  19. Enzymatic sulfation of saccharides with the regeneration of the PAPS cofactor. left: proposed transition state of the reaction.

  20. HYDROLASES – hydrolyses or condensations

  21. Fig. 2. Typical biotransformations with enantioselective amidohydrolases in whole cells of R. equi, A. aurescens and R. globerulus.

  22. Dynamic kinetic resolution – enzyme + racemization catalyst

  23. Dynamic kinetic resolution – enzyme + racemization reagent

  24. Enantioconvergent synthesis

  25. Catalytic antibodies If one accepts the basic principle that catalytic function results from the selective use of binding energy to stabilize transition states or to destabilize ground states preferentially, then the problem is simplified to one of synthesizing highly selective molecular receptors. While this remains a major challenge for synthetic chemistry, there does exist a biological solution to the problem of molecular recognition. It is a well-known fact in immunochemistry that the immune response can generate an antibody that is complementary to virtually any foreign molecular structure presented to it. The process whereby these selective, high-affinity receptors are generated resembles in many ways the natural evolution of enzymes. R. Lerner, K. Janda and P. Schultz – Scripps

  26. Table 1. A comparison of the evolution of enzymes and antibodies. Enzymes Antibodies exon shuffling V-D-J rearrangement gene duplication batteries of V, D, and J gene elements accumulation of point somatic hypermutation mutations natural selection clonal selection timescale: 101-108 years timescale: weeks

  27. The generation of immunological diversity by genetic recombination and somatic mutation.

  28. Immunization

  29. Transesterification a) Acyl transfer from the ester 6 to the alcohol 7, catalyzed by antibody 21H3, which was generated against the hapten 9; b) modeled structure of the acyl-antibody intermediate based on the X-ray crystal structure of the antibody-hapten 9 complex.

  30. Acyl transfer from the ester 2 to the alcohol 1 catalyzed by antibody 13D6.1, which was generated against the phosphonate diester 5; • NMR structure of the Michaelis complex, with 1 shown in blue and 2 in orange.

  31. Oxy-Cope rearrangement Transition-state analogue 19 and the oxy-Cope rearrangement catalyzed by antibody AZ28. Overlay of the active sites for the germline antibody structures of AZ28 with the hapten 19 (blue) and without hapten (green). The hapten is shown in yellow.

  32. Aldolization a) Broad substrate scope of antibody-catalyzed aldol reactions. The two antibodies have antipodal activities; b) substrate binding pockets for the antibodies 33F12 (left) and 93F3 (right). The light chain is shown in pink and the heavy chain in blue. The active-site lysine residue is also shown.

  33. Generation of an aldolase antibody by reactive immunization with the 2-diketone hapten 13.

More Related