Selective hydroxylation of sesquiterpenes remains a major challenge in synthetic chemistry due to their chemical homogeneity and steric complexity. Here, we report the Rieske oxygenase (RO) -catalyzed hydroxylation of sesquiterpenes using cumene dioxygenase (CDO) from Pseudomonas fluorescens IP01. Wild-type CDO catalyzed the monohydroxylation of the sesquiterpene β-bisabolene, producing ring-hydroxylated β-bisabolene-5-ol and tail-hydroxylated (S) -β-bisabolene-13-ol in a 64: 21 ratio, with a total product formation of 0. 43 ± 0. 07 mM. A single-loop deletion variant, L284del, enhanced both total product formation and selectivity toward the ring-hydroxylated product, producing 1. 40 ± 0. 08 mM and enabling preparative-scale isolation (17 mg, 0. 08 mmol, 39% yield). Another single-loop variant, I288del, similarly increased total product formation while shifting regioselectivity from ring- to tail-hydroxylation in a 5: 81 ratio, generating 1. 07 ± 0. 04 mM tail-hydroxylated product and enabling its preparative-scale isolation (24 mg, 0. 11 mmol, 55% yield). To understand this clear switch in regioselectivity, we conducted molecular dynamics (MD) and adaptive steered MD simulations. This revealed that I288del increased the substrate tunnel openness and frequency of access, promoting a tail-first orientation of the substrate. This preorientation enhanced the probability of reactive conformations in proximity to the catalytic iron. Binding energy calculations further supported a loss of orientation bias in I288del, giving further insight into the regioselectivity shift. Additional engineering yielded the variant N279TI288delA321T, which enhanced the formation of the tail-hydroxylated compound to 1. 58 ± 0. 26 mM. Further, variant I288del enabled the conversion of α-santalene, a reaction not catalyzed by the wild-type enzyme. Our study provides mechanistic insight into how tunnel dynamics and substrate preorientation govern selectivity in RO-catalyzed C-H functionalization.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Berger et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75bfcc6e9836116a244d1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.5c01130
Jonathan B. Berger
Sérgio M. Marques
Julian L. Wissner
JACS Au
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
University of Stuttgart
Masaryk University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...