| Literature DB >> 28940802 |
Ana I Benítez-Mateos1, Eneko San Sebastian2, Nicolás Ríos-Lombardía3, Francisco Morís3, Javier González-Sabín3, Fernando López-Gallego1,4.
Abstract
The development of cell-free and self-sufficient biocatalytic systems represents an emerging approach to address more complex synthetic schemes under nonphysiological conditions. Herein, we report the development of a self-sufficient heterogeneous biocatalyst for the synthesis of chiral alcohols without the need to add an exogenous cofactor. In this work, an NADPH-dependent ketoreductase was primarily stabilized and further co-immobilized with NADPH to catalyze asymmetric reductions without the addition of an exogenous cofactor. As a result, the immobilized cofactor is accessible, and thus, it is recycled inside the porous structure without diffusing out into the bulk, as demonstrated by single-particle in operando studies. This self-sufficient heterogeneous biocatalyst was used and recycled for the asymmetric reduction of eleven carbonyl compounds in a batch reactor without the addition of exogenous NADPH to achieve the corresponding alcohols in 100 % yield and >99 % ee; this high performance was maintained over five consecutive reaction cycles. Likewise, the self-sufficient heterogeneous biocatalyst was integrated into a plug flow reactor for the continuous synthesis of one model secondary alcohol, which gave rise to a space-time yield of 97-112 g L-1 day-1 ; additionally, the immobilized cofactor accumulated a total turnover number of 1076 for 120 h. This is one of the few examples of the successful implementation of continuous reactions in aqueous media catalyzed by cell-free and immobilized systems that integrate both enzymes and cofactors into the solid phase.Entities:
Keywords: asymmetric catalysis; biocatalysis; cofactors; immobilization; solid-phase synthesis
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28940802 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201703475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236