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1.
The highly enantioselective hydrolytic kinetic resolution (HKR) of racemic terminal epoxides by new bimetallic chiral (salen)Co provides a operationally very simple protocol for the synthesis of enantiomerically enriched terminal epoxides (>99% ee) and diols. Optically pure chlorohydrins have been synthesized in one step by ring‐opening reactions of terminal epoxides with HCl using kinetic resolution. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. Chirality  相似文献   

2.
New chiral porphyrin imine was synthesized from (S)‐3‐benzyl‐2‐methyl‐4‐phenylbutanal according to dipyrromethane method using trifluoroacetic acid, BF3 etherate, and p‐chloranil. Manganese complex of this chiral porphyrin imine ligand was used as catalyst in the asymmetric epoxidation of styrene derivatives possessing different substituents. Styrene derivatives possessing electron withdrawing groups gave the corresponding chiral epoxides in high yield up to 98% and ee up to 99%. The mechanism for the catalytic asymmetric epoxidation was also discussed based on transfer of oxygen.  相似文献   

3.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology - Enantioselective hydrolysis of epoxides by epoxide hydrolase (EH) is one of the most attractive approaches for the synthesis of chiral epoxides. So far,...  相似文献   

4.
Chiral epoxides are highly valuable intermediates, used for the synthesis of pharmaceutical drugs and agrochemicals. They have broad scope of market demand because of their applications. A major challenge in modern organic chemistry is to generate such compounds in high yields, with high stereo- and regio-selectivities. Epoxide hydrolases (EH) are promising biocatalysts for the preparation of chiral epoxides and vicinal diols. They exhibit high enantioselectivity for their substrates, and can be effectively used in the resolution of racemic epoxides through enantioselective hydrolysis. The selective hydrolysis of a racemic epoxide can produce both the corresponding diols and the unreacted epoxides and vicinal diol has prompted researchers to explore their use in the synthesis of epoxides and diols with high ee values.  相似文献   

5.
Epoxide hydrolases (EHs; 3.3.2.x) catalyze the enantioselective ring opening of racemic epoxides to the corresponding enantiopure vicinal diols and remaining equivalent unreacted epoxides. These epoxides and diols are used for the synthesis of chiral drug intermediates. With an upsurge in the methods for identification of novel microbial EHs, a lot of EHs have been discovered and utilized for kinetic resolution of racemic epoxides. However, there is still a constraint on the account of limited EHs being successfully applied on the preparative scale for industrial biotransformations. This limitation has to be overcome before application of identified functional EHs on large scale. Many strategies such as optimizing reaction media, immobilizing EHs and laboratory-scale directed evolution of EHs have been adopted for enhancing the industrial potential of EHs. In this review, these approaches have been highlighted which can serve as a pathway for the enrichment of already identified EHs for their application on an industrial scale in future studies.  相似文献   

6.
Asymmetric hydrolysis of a homologous range of straight chain 1,2-epoxyalkanes was achieved using whole cells of Chryseomonas luteola. Depending on the chain length, hydrolyses of the racemic epoxides afforded optically active epoxides and diols with varying degrees of optical purity. In the case of 1,2-epoxyoctane, the enantiomeric excess of the remaining (S)-epoxide and formed (R)-diol was excellent (ees > 98% and eep = 86%). This is the first report of a bacterial epoxide hydrolase with such unusual enantioselectivity for terminal mono-substituted epoxides bearing no directing group on the chiral C-2 carbon. Benzyl glycidyl ether and the 2,2-disubstituted epoxide, 2-methyl-1,2-epoxyheptane, were hydrolysed, but no enantioselectivity was observed. © Rapid Science Ltd. 1998  相似文献   

7.
Halohydrin dehalogenases are remarkable enzymes which possess promiscuous catalytic activity and serve as potential biocatalysts for the synthesis of chiral halohydrins, epoxides and β-substituted alcohols. The enzyme HheC exhibits a highly R enantioselectivity in the processes of dehalogenation of vicinal halohydrins and ring-opening of epoxides, which attracts more attentions in organic synthesis. Recently dozens of novel potential halohydrin dehalogenases have been identified by gene mining, however, most of the characterized enzymes showed low stereoselectivity. In this study, a novel halohydrin dehalogenase of HheA10 from Tsukamurella sp. 1534 has been heterologously expressed, purified and characterized. Substrate spectrum and kinetic resolution studies indicated the HheA10 was a highly S enantioselective enzyme toward several halohydrins, which produced the corresponding epoxides with the ee (enantiomeric excess) and E values up to >99% and >200 respectively. Our results revealed the HheA10 was a promising biocatalyst for the synthesis of enantiopure aromatic halohydrins and epoxides via enzymatic kinetic resolution of racemic halohydrins. What’s more important, the HheA10 as the first individual halohydrin dehalogenase with the highly S enantioselectivity provides a complementary enantioselectivity to the HheC.  相似文献   

8.
A chromatographic method is described for the direct enantiomeric characterization of all four regioisomeric epoxyeicosatrienoic acid (EET) metabolites generated by the cytochrome P450 arachidonate epoxygenase pathway. Following esterification, the individual methyl or pentafluorobenzyl esters are resolved by chiral phase HPLC utilizing a Chiralcel OB or OD column. This methodology will find analytical and preparative applications for chiral epoxides since it is convenient and efficient and does not destroy the epoxide functionality.  相似文献   

9.
Epoxides are attractive intermediates for producing chiral compounds. Important biocatalytic reactions involving epoxides include epoxide hydrolase mediated kinetic resolution, leading to the formation of diols and enantiopure remaining substrates, and enantioconvergent enzymatic hydrolysis, which gives high yields of a single enantiomer from racemic mixtures. Epoxides can also be converted by non-hydrolytic enantioselective ring opening, using alternative anionic nucleophiles; these reactions can be catalysed by haloalcohol dehalogenases. The differences in scope of these enzymatic conversions is related to their different catalytic mechanisms, which involve, respectively, covalent catalysis with an aspartate carboxylate as the nucleophile and non-covalent catalysis with a tyrosine that acts as a general acid-base. The emerging new possibilities for enantioselective biocatalytic conversion of epoxides suggests that their importance in green chemistry will grow.  相似文献   

10.
Enantiomers of nine K-region and one non-K-region epoxides of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons have been resolved by high-performance liquid chromatography with chiral stationary phases either ionically or covalently bonded to gamma-aminopropylsilanized silica. Resolution of enantiomers was confirmed by ultraviolet-visible absorption, circular dichroism, and mass spectral analyses. This method has been applied to the determination of optical purity and absolute configuration of the K-region epoxides formed in the metabolism of 1-methylbenz[a]anthracene, 7-methylbenz[a]anthracene, and 12-methylbenz[a]anthracene by rat liver microsomes.  相似文献   

11.
Duddeck H  Gómez ED 《Chirality》2009,21(1):51-68
Enantiomers of chiral ethers and acetals are notoriously difficult to differentiate because their reactivity is low and they are poor donors to any Lewis acid or metal ion. As an exception, epoxides are somewhat better donors. This review describes the properties of ethers, explains NMR methods for their chiral recognition and describes successful examples of ether differentiation. The majority of literature reports deals with chiral lanthanide shift reagents and dirhodium tetracarboxylate complexes, which were used as enantiopure auxiliaries to create diastereomeric adducts with dispersed (1)H and (13)C NMR signals. The various methods are compared as to which is best suited for which purpose.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Chiral epoxides and diols are important synthons for manufacturing fine chemicals and pharmaceuticals. The epoxide hydrolases (EC 3.3.2.-) catalyze the hydrolytic ring opening of epoxides producing the corresponding vicinal diol. Several isoenzymes display catalytic properties that position them as promising biocatalytic tools for the generation of enantiopure epoxides and diols.

Scope of review

This review focuses on the present data on enzyme structure and function in connection to biocatalytic applications. Available data on biocatalysis employed for purposes of stereospecific ring opening, to produce chiral vicinal diols, and kinetic resolution regimes, to achieve enantiopure epoxides, are discussed and related to results gained from structure–activity studies on the enzyme catalysts. More recent examples of the concept of directed evolution of enzyme function are also presented.

Major conclusions

The present understanding of structure–activity relationships in epoxide hydrolases regarding chemical catalysis is strong. With the ongoing research, a more detailed view of the factors that influence substrate specificities and stereospecificities is expected to arise. The already present use of epoxide hydrolases in synthetic applications is expected to expand as new enzymes are being isolated and characterized. Refined methodologies for directed evolution of desired catalytic and physicochemical properties may further boost the development of novel and useful biocatalysts.

General significance

The catalytic power of enzymes provides new possibilities for efficient, specific and sustainable technologies to be developed for production of useful chemicals.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Methane-grown cells ofMethylococcus capsulatus andMethylosinus trichosporium readily oxidized propene and various isomers of butene to their respective epoxides. When examined in a proton NMR spectrum using tris([3-trifluoromethylhydroxymethylene]-d-camphorato), europium III derivative as an optically active chemical shift reagent, the products propylene oxide and 1,2-epoxybutane were found to contain equal amounts of both isomers. Methane-grown cells of both bacteria had considerable levels of reducing equivalents to catalyze the epoxidation of gaseous olefins. Cells depleted of reductants catalyzed the oxidation in the presence of low levels of methanol or formaldehyde with a stoichiometry of about 2:1. The rates of epoxidation of propene and 1-butene in a continuous reactor were 2–3-times that of a batch-wise reaction; the epoxidation activity, however, was lost within 3 h. The inactivation was attributed to the reactivity of the accumulated epoxides in the reactor. Propene and 1-butene oxidation by both bacteria were drastically inhibited by the respective products. Thus, the major problem in the application of microorganisms for production of epoxides from gaseous olefins is the rapid separation of the reactive products.  相似文献   

14.
Summary An ethene-utilising bacterium was isolated in pure culture from soil and was tentatively identified as aMicrococcus sp. The organism accumulated epoxyalkanes (0.2–13 mM) from internal, terminal, cyclic and aryl-substituted olefins and exhibited a substrate specificity which was different from that expected on the basis of the chemical reactivity pattern in peracid epoxidations. Epoxyalkanes were hydrolysed at a much slower rate than the epoxidation step which allowed them to accumulate. Ethene-grown cells catalysed the stereospecific formation of R-1,2-epoxypropane (enantiomeric excess: e.e.=96%), R-1,2-epoxybutane (e.e.=94%) andtrans-(2R,3R)-epoxybutane (e.e.=84%). An ethene monooxygenase was implicated in the production of chiral epoxides in cell-free extracts of the bacterium. The (2S,3S)-enantiomer of racemictrans-2,3-epoxybutane was stereoselectively hydrolysed to completion resulting in an enrichment in the (2R,3R)-enantiomer. Further hydrolysis of 1,2-epoxyalkanes (C3-C4), however, occurred via complete destruction of both stereoisomers.  相似文献   

15.
A two-phase membrane bioreactor was developed to continuously produce enantiopure epoxides using the epoxide hydrolase activity of Rhodotorula glutinis. An aqueous/organic cascade, hydrophilic, hollow-fiber membrane bioreactor was used: (1) to carry out large-scale resolution of epoxides, (2) to continuously extract residual enantiopure epoxides from the aqueous phase, and (3) to separate inhibitory formed diol from the yeast cells contained in the aqueous phase. Dodecane was employed to dissolve-feed epoxide as well as to extract residual epoxide. 1,2-Epoxyhexane was used as a model substrate. By use of this membrane bioreactor, enantiopure (S)-1,2-epoxyhexane (>98% enantiomeric excess) was obtained with a volumetric productivity of 3.8 g l−1 h−1. The continuous-production system was operated for 12 days and resulted in 38 g enantiopure (S)-1,2-epoxyhexane. Received: 14 February 2000 / Received revision: 15 June 2000 / Accepted: 18 June 2000  相似文献   

16.
The formation of epoxides from several halohydrins was achieved using resting cells from Flavobacterium rigense. The reaction showed a high substrate specificity for halohydrins with a terminal halogen atom but only low enantioselectivity (12–58% e.e.). The epoxides always had the (S)-configuration. Substrates which in the halogen atom was replaced by another leaving group (-O-SO2CH3, -O-Tos, -N3) were not accepted. An attempt to improve the enantioselectivity by using a two phase system consisting of an aqueous and an organic solvent phase was not successful.  相似文献   

17.
Yeast strains (410) from more than 45 different genera were screened for the enantioselective hydrolysis of nitro substituted styrene oxides. These strains included 262 yeasts with known epoxides hydrolase activity for various other epoxides. Epoxide hydrolase activity for p-nitrostyrene oxide (pNSO) (177 strains) and m-nitrostyrene oxide (mNSO) (148 strains) was widespread in the yeasts, while activity for o-nitrostyrene oxide (oNSO) was less ubiquitous (22 strains). The strains that displayed enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of one or more of the nitro substituted styrene oxides (35 strains) were also screened against styrene oxide (SO). Rhodosporidium toruloides UOFS Y-0471 displayed the highest enantioselectivity for pNSO (ee 55%, yield 35%) while Rhodotorula glutinis UOFS Y-0653 displayed the highest enantioselectivity for mNSO (ee >98%, yield 29%), oNSO (ee 39%, yield 19%) and SO (ee >98%, yield 19%). (R)-Styrene oxide was preferentially hydrolysed to the corresponding (R)-diol with retention of configuration at the stereogenic centre. In the case of the nitro substituted styrene oxides the absolute configurations of the remaining epoxides and the formed diols were not established.  相似文献   

18.
Lee EY 《Biotechnology letters》2008,30(9):1509-1514
A number of epoxide hydrolase (EH)-mediated bioconversions have been developed to prepare single enantiomeric product from racemic substrates with a yield greater than 50%. Enantioconvergent hydrolysis using single or two EHs possessing complementary enantio- and regio-selectivity, EH-based chemoenzymatic reactions, and EH-triggered cascade-reactions have been developed for the preparation of chiral epoxides, epoxyalcohols, tetrahydrofuran derivatives and vicinal diols. All these bioconversions are based on stereochemical flexibilities of various EHs and can be used in total synthesis of biologically active compounds without the formation of unwanted enantiomers.  相似文献   

19.
One of the most powerful techniques that are currently available to measure thermodynamic parameters such as enthalpy (ΔH), Gibbs free energy (ΔG), entropy changes (ΔS), and binding affinity in chemical reactions is isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Recent advances in instrumentation have facilitated the development of ITC as a very essential analytical tool in biology and chemistry. In this article, we will focus on a review of the literature on the application of ITC for the study of chiral systems and chiral interactions. We present studies in which the ITC technique is used to study chiral interactions, for instance in chiral solutions, chiral organometallic complexes, guest‐host chiral binding interactions, and biological macromolecules. Finally, we put strong emphasis on the most recent application of ITC for the study of chirality in nanosystems and at the nanoscale.  相似文献   

20.
The epoxide hydrolase activity of Aspergillus niger was synthesized during growth of the fungus and was shown to be associated with the soluble cell fraction. An enzyme preparation was worked out which could be used in place of the whole mycelium as biocatalyst for the hydrolysis of epoxides. The effect of four different cosolvents on enzyme activity was investigated. Consequently, dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) was selected for epoxide solubilization. The effect of temperature on both reaction rate and enzyme stability was studied in the presence of DMSO (0.2 volume ratio). A temperature of 25 degrees C was selected for the reaction of bioconversion. With a substrate concentration of 4.5 mM a batch reactor showed that the enzyme preparation hydrolyzed para-nitrostyrene oxide with very high enantioselectivity. The (S) enantiomer of the epoxide remained in the reaction mixture and showed an enantiomeric excess higher than 99%. The substrate concentration could be increased to 20 mM without affecting the enantiomeric excess and degree of conversion. Therefore, the method is potentially useful for the preparative resolution of epoxides. Application are in the field of chiral synthons which are important building blocks in organic synthesis. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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