B. R.
Lichman
a,
E. D.
Lamming
b,
T.
Pesnot
b,
J. M.
Smith
a,
H. C.
Hailes
*b and
J. M.
Ward
*a
aDepartment of Biochemical Engineering, University College London, Bernard Katz Building, Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AH, UK. E-mail: j.ward@ucl.ac.uk
bDepartment of Chemistry, University College London, Christopher-Ingold Building, 20 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AJ, UK. E-mail: h.c.hailes@ucl.ac.uk
First published on 18th December 2014
We describe novel chemoenzymatic routes to (S)-benzylisoquinoline and (S)-tetrahydroprotoberberine alkaloids using the enzymes transaminase (TAm) and norcoclaurine synthase (NCS) in a one-pot, one-substrate ‘triangular’ cascade. Employment of up to two C–C bond forming steps allows for the rapid generation of molecular complexity under mild conditions.
Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIAs) are a large, diverse family of natural products found in both plants4 and animals.5 Many BIAs have pharmacological activities—these include analgesic,6 antimicrobial7 and antitumor8 effects—and consequently are common synthetic targets.9 A key step in the synthesis of many of these compounds is the formation of the tetrahydroisoquinoline (THIQ) moiety via a Pictet–Spengler condensation.10 Recently, a mild one-pot biomimetic approach to the formation of THIQs was developed, using phosphate buffer as a catalyst.11 There has also been recent progress made in the enzymatic synthesis of diverse chiral THIQs using the plant enzyme norcoclaurine synthase (NCS).12
Norlaudanosoline (tetrahydropapaveroline) 1a is a BIA found in mammals: it is the precursor to ‘endogenous’ morphine,5 and also has a number of neuronal effects including roles in Parkinson's disease13 and drug addiction.14 Synthetically, 1a is a versatile BIA precursor, and consequently it has been employed in synthetic biology/metabolic engineering routes to various BIAs.15 BIA 1a can be accessed by a Pictet–Spengler condensation between dopamine 2a and 3,4-dihydoxyphenylacetaldehyde 3a.16
Tetrahydroprotoberberine alkaloids (THPBs, berbines) are a subgroup of the BIAs found in both plants and animals, and include compounds such as canadine17 and spinosine.18a The THPB moiety can be accessed from 1avia a Pictet–Spengler reaction with formaldehyde.18 The two compounds directly formed by this reaction (4 and 5) have been shown to have potential in cancer chemotherapeutics.19 The regioselectivity of this chemical Pictet–Spengler reaction (major product: 10,11-dihydroxy 4) contrasts with the regioselectivity of the plant berberine-bridge enzyme (BBE), which typically forms 9,10-dihydroxy-THPBs from a N-methylated BIA precursor.20 Thus chemical approaches to THPBs provide a complementary method to the reported BBE approach.
Scheme 1 Overview of the biocatalytic and non-enzymatic cascades presented in this work, including the ‘triangular’ cascade. |
Previous attempts to achieve this type of cascade in vitro and in vivo have utilised a monoamine oxidase (MAO) as the catalyst in the first step, converting 2a to 3a. Several MAO approaches have focused on forming rac-1a through a spontaneous Pictet–Spengler reaction (typically phosphate catalysis).16 A number of in vivo metabolic cascades forming (S)-reticuline report the use of recombinant NCS as the Pictet–Spengler catalyst. However, it is not clear that NCS is active in these systems: any chirality reported seems to be the result of (S)-selective enzymes downstream of NCS.15a–d
Here, we employ a TAm for the conversion of 2a to 3a (step 1), which then combine to form 1a (step 2). TAms have an advantage over MAOs in this system: the conversion of 2a to 3a with TAms can be controlled by stoichiometrically limiting the quantity of co-substrate (in this instance, pyruvate) available. Furthermore, we avoid the problems associated with driving TAm reactions to completion, as the Pictet–Spengler reaction removes equal quantities of molecules from both sides of the TAm equilibrium. This three-sided ‘triangular’ cascade design results in a system with high atom economy.3
Entry | TAm | Organism | Uniprot entry name | Gene name | Conv.b (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a 50 mM 2a, 25 mM pyruvate, 1 mM PLP, 10% v.v−1 TAm, 37 °C, 4 h. b Concentration of rac-1a, determined by analytical HPLC. c n.d. = not detected. See ESI Fig. S1 for reaction time course. | |||||
1 | Empty vector | n.d.c | |||
2 | BSU_09260 | Bacillus subtilis | YHXA_BACSU | yhxA | n.d. |
3 | CV_202521 | Chromobacterium violaceum | Q7NWG4_CHRVO | CV_2025 | 21 |
4 | Dgeo_1416 | Deinococcus geothermalis | Q1IYH3_DEIGD | argD/lysJ | n.d. |
5 | KPN_00255 | Klebsiella pneumoniae | A6T537_KLEP7 | gabT | n.d. |
6 | PP_0596 | Pseudomonas putida | Q88Q98_PSEPK | PP_0596 | Trace |
7 | PP_3718 | Pseudomonas putida | Q88GK3_PSEPK | PP_3718 | 14 |
8 | SaV_2612 | Streptomyces avermitilis | Q82JZ2_STRAW | SAV_2612 | Trace |
9 | SaV_4551 | Streptomyces avermitilis | Q82ER2_STRAW | SaV_4551 | n.d. |
10 | VF_JS1722 | Vibrio fluvialis | F2XBU9_VIBFL | JS17 | Trace |
In order to form (S)-1a from 2a two aspects of the previous TAm screening reaction conditions were modified. Changing the buffer from phosphate to HEPES removed most of the background chemical reaction11 and adding purified Δ29TfNCS enabled catalytic formation of the chiral product (S)-1a from 2a. Optimum reaction conditions were determined by varying the concentrations of 2a, NCS and TAm present. A balance between reaction components was crucial to ensure the rates of the two steps were matched; a build-up of 3a would cause an increase in undesirable side-reactions including the non-enzymatic Pictet–Spengler condensation, which would reduce the final enantiomeric excess (ee) of the product.
BIA (S)-1a was produced from 2a with very good conversions and excellent enantioselectivity. In all cases, an increase in TAm concentration resulted in a greater consumption of 2a, generally leading to an increase in product formation (Table 2). However, at lower concentrations of 2a (20 mM) the use of 20% v.v−1 CV2025 lysate, rather than 30%, was optimal. The enantioselectivity was excellent under all conditions. In terms of conversion, the effect of NCS concentration was more apparent with higher concentrations of dopamine. The best conditions identified were those with 20 mM 2a, 500 μg mL−1 NCS and 20% v.v−1 CV2025 lysate, which provided an 87% conversion of (S)-1a from 2a with an ee of 99%.
Amine [mM] | CV2025 (v.v−1) [%] | NCS [μg mL−1] | Conv.b [%] | eec [%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a General reaction conditions: 2 equivalents 2a or 2b, 1 equivalent pyruvate, purified Δ29TfNCS and CV2025 lysate, 50 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 37 °C, 3 h. b Determined by analytical HPLC. Conversions in brackets refer to depletion of primary amine. c Determined by chiral HPLC of the crude product. | |||||
2a | 20 | 10 | 100 | 74 (74) | 99 |
2a | 20 | 20 | 100 | 86 (89) | 99 |
2a | 20 | 30 | 100 | 82 (93) | 99 |
2a | 20 | 10 | 500 | 77 (82) | 99 |
2a | 20 | 20 | 500 | 87 (92) | 99 |
2a | 20 | 30 | 500 | 84 (95) | 98 |
2a | 50 | 10 | 100 | 36 (42) | 98 |
2a | 50 | 20 | 100 | 55 (66) | 97 |
2a | 50 | 30 | 100 | 70 (78) | 99 |
2a | 50 | 10 | 500 | 42 (48) | 98 |
2a | 50 | 20 | 500 | 65 (73) | 98 |
2a | 50 | 30 | 500 | 72 (85) | 96 |
2b | 20 | 20 | 500 | 56 (57) | 90 |
To demonstrate the versatility of this system, it was used to synthesise (S)-1b from 2-(3-hydroxyphenyl)ethylamine 2b. The para-hydroxyl group of 2a is not required for the Pictet–Spengler condensation, and thus 2b is a suitable substrate for NCS.12b Using the optimum conditions determined previously for 2a, (S)-1b was formed from 2b with a fair conversion of 56% and a high ee of 90%. The lower conversion and ee compared to (S)-1a is possibly reflective of a poorer affinity of TfNCS towards for 2b compared to the natural substrate 2a.
In order to form THPBs (S)-4 and (S)-5, a one-pot synthesis of (S)-1a was conducted (as described above) and formaldehyde was added to the reaction after 3 hours. This triggered the second Pictet–Spengler condensation and resulted in the formation of (S)-4 and (S)-5 in a ratio of approximately 7:1 (Scheme 2). This cascade features 2 enzymes, 3 steps and the formation of 4 bonds, including 2 C–C bonds. The overall reaction occurred with good conversion: the second Pictet–Spengler step alone (from (S)-1a) provided 74% conversion (64% and 9% for (S)-4 and (S)-5 respectively), which translates as an overall 64% conversion (56% and 8%) from 2a. As the chirality of the system is established by NCS, the subsequent addition of formaldehyde does not affect the ee: only the (S)-enantiomer of the major product 4 was observed by chiral HPLC.
The major regioisomer 4 formed by this method has 10,11-dihydroxy regiochemistry. BBE, a plant enzyme which catalyses the formation of (S)-THPBs en route to berberine, typically forms products with 9,10-dihydroxy regioselectivity.20 This enzyme has recently been used in a novel in vitro deracemisation cascade to produce (S)-THPBs.20b The synthesis presented here and the BBE catalysed cascade can be seen as complementary methods, providing efficient chemoenzymatic routes to 10,11-dihydroxy-(S)-THPBs and 9,10-dihydroxy-(S)-THPBs respectively.
Finally, to demonstrate the preparative potential of our cascades, we performed syntheses of (S)-1a and (S)-4 on a 0.5 mmol scale. The concentrations of components in these cascades were the same as those used in the micro-scale cascades (Scheme 2). The synthesis scaled with no complications: conversion of 2a to (S)-1a was achieved in 2 hours with 86% conversion and 62% isolated yield (>95% ee). (S)-4 was formed from 2a in 2.5 hours with 47% conversion and 42% isolated yield (>95% ee). The identities of these products were verified by NMR.
The cascades presented here exhibit high atom economy, the in situ generation of reactive intermediates, and the rapid accumulation of molecular complexity through C–C bond forming steps. Overall, these syntheses demonstrate the remarkable potential of in vitro biocatalysis for the formation of complex chiral compounds.
We gratefully acknowledge the Wellcome Trust for studentship funding to B. R. L., EPSRC and GlaxoSmithKline for studentship funding to E. D. L., and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) (BB/G014426/1) for funding T. P.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c4gc02325k |
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