Dehydration in water: solid-supported lipases as green catalysts for esterification†
Abstract
Catalytic esterification in water has been achieved with the aid of a commercially available polymer-supported lipase, Novozym-435. Remarkably, this well-known biocatalyst demonstrates significant activity towards esterification using just water as the reaction medium. This methodology features representative esterifications of complex acids and alcohols, in the presence of unprotected amines. The work disclosed leading to esters typically requires only two equivalents of alcohol, although conversion for water-soluble alcohols appears to require increased loadings. Recycling of both the aqueous medium and catalyst are documented, highlighting the potential of this new technology, especially using directed evolution on the enzyme involved. Pharmaceutically relevant compounds are efficiently esterified (e.g., Ibuprofen, Tolmetin, and Ticagrelor) and multi-step, one-pot chemoenzymatic sequences can be performed to demonstrate the robustness of this catalytic aqueous system.