Published October 19, 2022 | Supplemental Material + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Enzymatic Nitrogen Insertion into Unactivated C-H Bonds

An error occurred while generating the citation.

Abstract

Selective functionalization of aliphatic C–H bonds, ubiquitous in molecular structures, could allow ready access to diverse chemical products. While enzymatic oxygenation of C–H bonds is well established, the analogous enzymatic nitrogen functionalization is still unknown; nature is reliant on preoxidized compounds for nitrogen incorporation. Likewise, synthetic methods for selective nitrogen derivatization of unbiased C–H bonds remain elusive. In this work, new-to-nature heme-containing nitrene transferases were used as starting points for the directed evolution of enzymes to selectively aminate and amidate unactivated C(sp³)–H sites. The desymmetrization of methyl- and ethylcyclohexane with divergent site selectivity is offered as demonstration. The evolved enzymes in these lineages are highly promiscuous and show activity toward a wide array of substrates, providing a foundation for further evolution of nitrene transferase function. Computational studies and kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are consistent with a stepwise radical pathway involving an irreversible, enantiodetermining hydrogen atom transfer (HAT), followed by a lower-barrier diastereoselectivity-determining radical rebound step. In-enzyme molecular dynamics (MD) simulations reveal a predominantly hydrophobic pocket with favorable dispersion interactions with the substrate. By offering a direct path from saturated precursors, these enzymes present a new biochemical logic for accessing nitrogen-containing compounds.

Additional Information

© 2022 American Chemical Society. The authors thank Dr. Zhen Liu for assistance with CalB reactions, Dr. Michael K. Takashe for assistance with collecting X-ray single crystal data, Ziyang Qin for assistance with synthesis, and Dr. Mona Shahgholi for HRMS analysis. This research was supported by the Department of Energy (DE-SC0021141) to F.H.A. and by a Ruth Kirschstein NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship (F32GM143799) to E.A. Financial support from the XSEDE Science Gateway Program (under the NSF Grant Numbers ACI-1548562, CHE180061, and CHE210031) (J.S.H. and S.C.M.) and the National Institutes of Health under R15 GM142103 (J.S.H.) is acknowledged. CCDC 2194384–2194387 contain the supplementary crystallographic data for this paper. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

Attached Files

Accepted Version - nihms-1840949.pdf

Supplemental Material - ja2c08285_si_001.pdf

Files

ja2c08285_si_001.pdf
Files (32.0 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:779dc324127d8cfa1d6603cb84b716bc
30.4 MB Preview Download
md5:caf55b82e61e66a0434dd2e597df006d
1.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
December 22, 2023