» Articles » PMID: 32421034

Continuous Flow Bioamination of Ketones in Organic Solvents at Controlled Water Activity Using Immobilized ω-Transaminases

Overview
Journal Adv Synth Catal
Date 2020 May 19
PMID 32421034
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Compared with biocatalysis in aqueous media, the use of enzymes in neat organic solvents enables increased solubility of hydrophobic substrates and can lead to more favorable thermodynamic equilibria, avoidance of possible hydrolytic side reactions and easier product recovery. ω-Transaminases from . (AsR-ωTA) and (Cv-ωTA) were immobilized on controlled porosity glass metal-ion affinity beads (EziG) and applied in neat organic solvents for the amination of 1-phenoxypropan-2-one with 2-propylamine. The reaction system was investigated in terms of type of carrier material, organic solvents and reaction temperature. Optimal conditions were found with more hydrophobic carrier materials and toluene as reaction solvent. The system's water activity (a) was controlled via salt hydrate pairs during both the biocatalyst immobilization step and the progress of the reaction in different non-polar solvents. Notably, the two immobilized ωTAs displayed different optimal values of a, namely 0.7 for EziG-AsR-ωTA and 0.2 for EziG-Cv-ωTA. In general, high catalytic activity was observed in various organic solvents even when a high substrate concentration (450-550 mM) and only one equivalent of 2-propylamine were applied. Under batch conditions, a chemical turnover (TTN) above 13000 was obtained over four subsequent reaction cycles with the same batch of EziG-immobilized ωTA. Finally, the applicability of the immobilized biocatalyst in neat organic solvents was further demonstrated in a continuous flow packed-bed reactor. The flow reactor showed excellent performance without observable loss of enzymatic catalytic activity over several days of operation. In general, ca. 70% conversion was obtained in 72 hours using a 1.82 mL flow reactor and toluene as flow solvent, thus affording a space-time yield of 1.99 g L h. Conversion reached above 90% when the reaction was run up to 120 hours.

Citing Articles

A Novel Platform Featuring Nanomagnetic Ligand Fishing Based on Fixed-Orientation Immobilized Magnetic Beads for Screening Potential Cyclooxygenase-2 Inhibitors from Leaves.

Zhang F, Sun F, Yu L, Li F, Liu L, Cao X Molecules. 2024; 29(23).

PMID: 39683958 PMC: 11643511. DOI: 10.3390/molecules29235801.


Development of Continuous Flow Systems to Access Secondary Amines Through Previously Incompatible Biocatalytic Cascades.

Mattey A, Ford G, Citoler J, Baldwin C, Marshall J, Palmer R Angew Chem Weinheim Bergstr Ger. 2024; 133(34):18808-18813.

PMID: 38505092 PMC: 10947180. DOI: 10.1002/ange.202103805.


Biocatalytic reduction of alkenes in micro-aqueous organic solvent catalysed by an immobilised ene reductase.

Villa R, Ferrer-Carbonell C, Paul C Catal Sci Technol. 2023; 13(19):5530-5535.

PMID: 38013840 PMC: 10544049. DOI: 10.1039/d3cy00541k.


A systematic review about affinity tags for one-step purification and immobilization of recombinant proteins: integrated bioprocesses aiming both economic and environmental sustainability.

Leonhardt F, Gennari A, Paludo G, Schmitz C, da Silveira F, Moura D 3 Biotech. 2023; 13(6):186.

PMID: 37193330 PMC: 10182917. DOI: 10.1007/s13205-023-03616-w.


Continuous Flow Biocatalytic Reductive Amination by Co-Entrapping Dehydrogenases with Agarose Gel in a 3D-Printed Mould Reactor.

Croci F, Jan Vilim , Adamopoulou T, Tseliou V, Schoenmakers P, Knaus T Chembiochem. 2022; 23(22):e202200549.

PMID: 36173971 PMC: 9828473. DOI: 10.1002/cbic.202200549.


References
1.
Bohmer W, Knaus T, Volkov A, Slot T, Shiju N, Engelmark Cassimjee K . Highly efficient production of chiral amines in batch and continuous flow by immobilized ω-transaminases on controlled porosity glass metal-ion affinity carrier. J Biotechnol. 2018; 291:52-60. PMC: 7116800. DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2018.12.001. View

2.
Tamborini L, Fernandes P, Paradisi F, Molinari F . Flow Bioreactors as Complementary Tools for Biocatalytic Process Intensification. Trends Biotechnol. 2017; 36(1):73-88. DOI: 10.1016/j.tibtech.2017.09.005. View

3.
Verho O, Backvall J . Chemoenzymatic dynamic kinetic resolution: a powerful tool for the preparation of enantiomerically pure alcohols and amines. J Am Chem Soc. 2015; 137(12):3996-4009. PMC: 4415027. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b01031. View

4.
Wheeler C, Croteau R . Terpene cyclase catalysis in organic solvent/minimal water media: demonstration and optimization of (+)-alpha-pinene cyclase activity. Arch Biochem Biophys. 1986; 248(1):429-34. DOI: 10.1016/0003-9861(86)90440-6. View

5.
Zaks A, Klibanov A . Enzymatic catalysis in organic media at 100 degrees C. Science. 1984; 224(4654):1249-51. DOI: 10.1126/science.6729453. View