Publication | Closed Access
Enantioselective Epoxidation of Terminal Alkenes to (<i>R</i>)‐ and (<i>S</i>)‐Epoxides by Engineered Cytochromes P450 BM‐3
127
Citations
31
References
2005
Year
EngineeringOrganic ChemistryChemistryEnantioselective EpoxidationEpoxide EnantiomersBiochemical EngineeringChemical BiotechnologyAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryBiocatalysisActive SiteTerminal AlkenesEnantioselective SynthesisBiomolecular EngineeringAlkene MetathesisNatural SciencesCytochrome P450 Bm-3BiotechnologySynthetic BiologyPathway Engineering
Cytochrome P450 BM-3 from Bacillus megaterium was engineered for enantioselective epoxidation of simple terminal alkenes. Screening saturation mutagenesis libraries, in which mutations were introduced in the active site of an engineered P450, followed by recombination of beneficial mutations generated two P450 BM-3 variants that convert a range of terminal alkenes to either (R)- or (S)-epoxide (up to 83 % ee) with high catalytic turnovers (up to 1370) and high epoxidation selectivities (up to 95 %). A biocatalytic system using E. coli lysates containing P450 variants as the epoxidation catalysts and in vitro NADPH regeneration by the alcohol dehydrogenase from Thermoanaerobium brockii generates each of the epoxide enantiomers, without additional cofactor.
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