Issue 21, 2025

Engineered enzymatic cascade converts diols to amino alcohols

Abstract

Aliphatic amino alcohols such as 6-amino-1-hexanol are potential platform chemicals for a variety of advanced materials, but applications are currently limited by reagent costs. Aliphatic amino alcohols can currently be synthesized from biomass-derived diols at elevated temperatures and pressures using Ru-based catalysts that produce a mixture of amino-alcohol, diamine, and cyclic amine products. Replacing chemical amination with an enzymatic cascade would reduce resource needs and enable reactions under milder conditions. In this work, we characterized a two-enzyme cascade that selectively converts C4–C7 diols to the corresponding amino alcohols under aqueous conditions at room temperature and pressure. By engineering the rate-limiting enzyme and optimizing reaction conditions, we increased amino alcohol production nearly 30-fold, achieving a selectivity of 99%. The same enzyme cascade could also be used to convert amino alcohols into cyclic amines through reduction of the corresponding cyclic imine. This engineered cascade provides a green opportunity to sustainably synthesize asymmetric bifunctional platform chemicals.

Graphical abstract: Engineered enzymatic cascade converts diols to amino alcohols

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Apr 2024
Accepted
30 Apr 2025
First published
06 Mei 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Green Chem., 2025,27, 6283-6292

Engineered enzymatic cascade converts diols to amino alcohols

H. R. Valentino, L. Qian, J. M. Parks, E. E. Drufva, A. Sedova, P. S. Mehta, M. P. Watson, R. J. Giannone, S. S. Galanie and J. K. Michener, Green Chem., 2025, 27, 6283 DOI: 10.1039/D4GC02141J

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