Repurposing Visible-Light-Excited Ene-Reductases for Diastereo- and Enantioselective Lactones Synthesis

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2024 Apr 24:e202402673. doi: 10.1002/anie.202402673. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Repurposing enzymes to catalyze non-natural asymmetric transformations that are difficult to achieve using traditional chemical methods is of significant importance. Although radical C-O bond formation has emerged as a powerful approach for constructing oxygen-containing compounds, controlling the stereochemistry poses a great challenge. Here we present the development of a dual bio-/photo-catalytic system comprising an ene-reductase and an organic dye for achieving stereoselective lactonizations. By integrating directed evolution and photoinduced single electron oxidation, we repurposed engineered ene-reductases to steer non-natural radical C-O formations (one C-O bond for hydrolactonizations and lactonization-alkylations while two C-O bonds for lactonization-oxygenations). This dual catalysis gave a new approach to a diverse array of enantioenhanced 5- and 6-membered lactones with vicinal stereocenters, part of which bears a quaternary stereocenter (up to 99% enantiomeric excess, up to 12.9:1 diastereomeric ratio). Detailed mechanistic studies, including computational simulations, uncovered the synergistic effect of the enzyme and the externally added organophotoredox catalyst Rh6G.

Keywords: asymmetric synthesis; ene-reductases; lactones; photoenzymatic catalysis; single electron oxidation.