35661-39-3Relevant articles and documents
Fungal Dioxygenase AsqJ Is Promiscuous and Bimodal: Substrate-Directed Formation of Quinolones versus Quinazolinones
Einsiedler, Manuel,Jamieson, Cooper S.,Maskeri, Mark A.,Houk, Kendall N.,Gulder, Tobias A. M.
supporting information, p. 8297 - 8302 (2021/03/01)
Previous studies showed that the FeII/α-ketoglutarate dependent dioxygenase AsqJ induces a skeletal rearrangement in viridicatin biosynthesis in Aspergillus nidulans, generating a quinolone scaffold from benzo[1,4]diazepine-2,5-dione substrates. We report that AsqJ catalyzes an additional, entirely different reaction, simply by a change in substituent in the benzodiazepinedione substrate. This new mechanism is established by substrate screening, application of functional probes, and computational analysis. AsqJ excises H2CO from the heterocyclic ring structure of suitable benzo[1,4]diazepine-2,5-dione substrates to generate quinazolinones. This novel AsqJ catalysis pathway is governed by a single substituent within the complex substrate. This unique substrate-directed reactivity of AsqJ enables the targeted biocatalytic generation of either quinolones or quinazolinones, two alkaloid frameworks of exceptional biomedical relevance.
Determination of Chemical and Enantiomeric Purity of α-Amino Acids and their Methyl Esters as N-Fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl Derivatives Using Amylose-derived Chiral Stationary Phases
Islam, Md. Fokhrul,Adhikari, Suraj,Paik, Man-Jeong,Lee, Wonjae
, p. 332 - 338 (2019/04/13)
Liquid chromatographic enantiomer separation and simultaneous determination of chemical and enantiomeric purity of α-amino acids and their methyl esters as N-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl (FMOC) derivatives was performed on three covalently bonded type chiral stationary phases (CSPs) derived from amylose derivatives. The enantiomer separation of α-amino acid esters as N-FMOC derivatives was better than that of the corresponding acids, especially for CSP 1 and 2. Chemical impurities as the corresponding racemic acids present in several commercially available racemic amino acid methyl esters were observed to be 0.49–17.50%. Enantiomeric impurities of several commercially available L-amino acid methyl esters were found to be 0.03–0.58%, whereas chemical impurities as the corresponding racemic acids present in the same analytes were found to be 0.13–13.62%. This developed analytical method will be useful for the determination of chemical and enantiomeric purity of α-amino acids and/or esters as N-FMOC derivatives using amylose-derived CSPs.
Structure-guided engineering of: Meso -diaminopimelate dehydrogenase for enantioselective reductive amination of sterically bulky 2-keto acids
Cheng, Xinkuan,Chen, Xi,Feng, Jinhui,Wu, Qiaqing,Zhu, Dunming
, p. 4994 - 5002 (2018/10/17)
meso-Diaminopimelate dehydrogenase (DAPDH) and mutant enzymes are an excellent choice of biocatalysts for the conversion of 2-keto acids to the corresponding d-amino acids. However, their application in the enantioselective reductive amination of bulky 2-keto acids, such as phenylglyoxylic acid, 2-oxo-4-phenylbutyric acid, and indole-3-pyruvic acid, is still challenging. In this study, the structure-guided site-saturation mutagenesis of a Symbiobacterium thermophilum DAPDH (StDAPDH) gave rise to a double-site mutant W121L/H227I, which showed dramatically improved enzyme activities towards various 2-keto acids including these sterically bulky substrates. Several d-amino acids were prepared in optically pure form. The molecular docking of substrates into the active sites of wild-type and mutant W121L/H227I enzymes revealed that the substrate binding cavity of the mutant enzyme was reshaped to accommodate these bulky substrates, thus leading to higher enzyme activity. These results lay a foundation for further shaping the substrate binding pocket and manipulating the interactions between the substrate and binding sites to access highly active d-amino acid dehydrogenases for the preparation of synthetically challenging d-amino acids.