Co-reporter:Ketaki D. Belsare, Mary C. Andorfer, Frida S. Cardenas, Julia R. Chael, Hyun June Park, and Jared C. Lewis
ACS Synthetic Biology March 17, 2017 Volume 6(Issue 3) pp:416-416
Publication Date(Web):December 29, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acssynbio.6b00297
Directed evolution is a powerful tool for optimizing enzymes, and mutagenesis methods that improve enzyme library quality can significantly expedite the evolution process. Here, we report a simple method for targeted combinatorial codon mutagenesis (CCM). To demonstrate the utility of this method for protein engineering, CCM libraries were constructed for cytochrome P450BM3, pfu prolyl oligopeptidase, and the flavin-dependent halogenase RebH; 10–26 sites were targeted for codon mutagenesis in each of these enzymes, and libraries with a tunable average of 1–7 codon mutations per gene were generated. Each of these libraries provided improved enzymes for their respective transformations, which highlights the generality, simplicity, and tunability of CCM for targeted protein engineering.Keywords: codon mutagenesis; cytochrome P450; directed evolution; halogenase; prolyl oligopeptidase;
Co-reporter:Joseph J. Gair;Brandon E. Haines;Alexander S. Filatov;Djamaladdin G. Musaev;Jared C. Lewis
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2017 vol. 8(Issue 8) pp:5746-5756
Publication Date(Web):2017/07/24
DOI:10.1039/C7SC01674C
Mono-protected amino acid (MPAA) ligands are used in a number of Pd-catalyzed C–H functionalization reactions. MPAAs have been proposed to bind to Pd(II) via κ2-(N,O) coordination, but such binding has not yet been experimentally validated. Herein, we report the synthesis and detailed characterization of a series of MPAA complexes prepared via cyclopalladation of dimethylbenzylamine in the presence of MPAAs. The isolated complexes exist as μ-carboxylato (MPAA) bridged dimers and feature potential M–M cooperativity and secondary sphere hydrogen bonding. Selective MPAA coordination and relay of stereochemistry, previously suggested to uniquely result from κ2-(N,O) MPAA coordination, are both observed. The isolated MPAA complexes undergo C–C and C–X (X = Cl, Br, I) bond formation when treated with electrophiles used for catalytic C–H functionalization. Stoichiometric iodination of MPAA palladacycles was found to proceed via a dinuclear palladium species with one equivalent of iodine in the rate limiting transition structure, and the isolated complexes also served as viable precatalysts for catalytic C–H functionalization. Together, these results provide a number of insights into the reactivity of Pd-MPAA complexes relevant to C–H bond functionalization.
Co-reporter:Mary C. Andorfer, Hyun June Park, Jaylie Vergara-Coll and Jared C. Lewis
Chemical Science 2016 vol. 7(Issue 6) pp:3720-3729
Publication Date(Web):19 Feb 2016
DOI:10.1039/C5SC04680G
RebH variants capable of chlorinating substituted indoles ortho-, meta-, and para- to the indole nitrogen were evolved by directly screening for altered selectivity on deuterium-substituted probe substrates using mass spectrometry. This systematic approach allowed for rapid accumulation of beneficial mutations using simple adaptive walks and should prove generally useful for altering and optimizing the selectivity of C–H functionalization catalysts. Analysis of the beneficial mutations showed that structure-guided selection of active site residues for targeted mutagenesis can be complicated either by activity/selectivity tradeoffs that reduce the possibility of detecting such mutations or by epistatic effects that actually eliminate the benefits of a mutation in certain contexts. As a corollary to this finding, the precise manner in which the beneficial mutations identified led to the observed changes in RebH selectivity is not clear. Docking simulations suggest that tryptamine binds to these variants as tryptophan does to native halogenases, but structural studies will be required to confirm these models and shed light on how particular mutations impact tryptamine binding. Similar directed evolution efforts on other enzymes or artificial metalloenzymes could enable a wide range of C–H functionalization reactions.
Co-reporter:Landon J. Durak, James T. Payne, and Jared C. Lewis
ACS Catalysis 2016 Volume 6(Issue 3) pp:1451
Publication Date(Web):January 25, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acscatal.5b02558
Engineered variants of rebeccamycin halogenase were used to selectively halogenate a number of biologically active aromatic compounds. Subsequent Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions on the crude extracts of these reactions were used to install aryl, amine, and ether substituents at the halogenation site. This simple, chemoenzymatic method enables nondirected functionalization of C–H bonds on a range of substrates to provide access to derivatives that would be challenging or inefficient to prepare by other means.Keywords: chemoenzymatic; cross-coupling; C−H functionalization; halogenase; late-stage diversification
Co-reporter:Yifan Gu;Ken Ellis-Guardiola;Poonam Srivastava ; Jared C. Lewis
ChemBioChem 2015 Volume 16( Issue 13) pp:1880-1883
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201500165
Abstract
A bicyclo[6,1,0]nonyne-substituted 9-mesityl-10-methyl-acridinium cofactor was prepared and covalently linked to a prolyl oligopeptidase scaffold containing a genetically encoded 4-azido-L-phenylalanine residue in its active site. The resulting artificial enzyme catalyzed sulfoxidation when irradiated with visible light in the presence of air. This reaction proceeds by initial electron abstraction from the sulfide within the enzyme active site, and the protein scaffold extended the fluorescence lifetime of the acridium cofactor. The mode of sulfide activation and placement of the acridinium cofactor (5) in POP-ZA4-5 make this artificial enzyme a promising platform for developing selective photocatalytic transformations.
Co-reporter:James T. Payne;Dr. Catherine B. Poor; Jared C. Lewis
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 14) pp:4226-4230
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201411901
Abstract
We recently characterized the substrate scope of wild-type RebH and proceeded to evolve variants of this enzyme with improved stability for biocatalysis. The substrate scopes of both RebH and the stabilized variants, however, are limited primarily to compounds similar in size to tryptophan. A substrate walking approach was used to further evolve RebH variants with expanded substrate scope. Two particularly notable variants were identified: 3-SS, which provides high conversion of tricyclic tryptoline derivatives; and 4-V, which accepts a broad range of large indoles and carbazoles. This constitutes the first reported use of directed evolution to enable the functionalization of substrates not accepted by wild-type RebH and demonstrates the utility of RebH variants for the site-selective halogenation of biologically active compounds.
Co-reporter:James T. Payne;Dr. Catherine B. Poor; Jared C. Lewis
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 14) pp:4300-4304
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201411901
Abstract
We recently characterized the substrate scope of wild-type RebH and proceeded to evolve variants of this enzyme with improved stability for biocatalysis. The substrate scopes of both RebH and the stabilized variants, however, are limited primarily to compounds similar in size to tryptophan. A substrate walking approach was used to further evolve RebH variants with expanded substrate scope. Two particularly notable variants were identified: 3-SS, which provides high conversion of tricyclic tryptoline derivatives; and 4-V, which accepts a broad range of large indoles and carbazoles. This constitutes the first reported use of directed evolution to enable the functionalization of substrates not accepted by wild-type RebH and demonstrates the utility of RebH variants for the site-selective halogenation of biologically active compounds.
Co-reporter:Chen Zhang, Poonam Srivastava, Ken Ellis-Guardiola, Jared C. Lewis
Tetrahedron 2014 70(27–28) pp: 4245-4249
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.tet.2014.03.008
Co-reporter:Hao Yang;Poonam Srivastava;Chen Zhang ; Jared C. Lewis
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 2) pp:223-227
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201300661
Abstract
Strain-promoted azide–alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC) can be used to generate artificial metalloenzymes (ArMs) from scaffold proteins containing a p-azido-L-phenylalanine (Az) residue and catalytically active bicyclononyne-substituted metal complexes. The high efficiency of this reaction allows rapid ArM formation when using Az residues within the scaffold protein in the presence of cysteine residues or various reactive components of cellular lysate. In general, cofactor-based ArM formation allows the use of any desired metal complex to build unique inorganic protein materials. SPAAC covalent linkage further decouples the native function of the scaffold from the installation process because it is not affected by native amino acid residues; as long as an Az residue can be incorporated, an ArM can be generated. We have demonstrated the scope of this method with respect to both the scaffold and cofactor components and established that the dirhodium ArMs generated can catalyze the decomposition of diazo compounds and both SiH and olefin insertion reactions involving these carbene precursors.
Co-reporter:Dr. Catherine B. Poor;Mary C. Andorfer ; Jared C. Lewis
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 9) pp:1286-1289
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201300780
Abstract
We previously reported that the halogenase RebH catalyzes selective halogenation of several heterocycles and carbocycles, but product yields were limited by enzyme instability. Here, we use directed evolution to engineer an RebH variant, 3-LR, with a Topt over 5 °C higher than that of wild-type, and 3-LSR, with a Tm 18 °C higher than that of wild-type. These enzymes provided significantly improved conversion (up to fourfold) for halogenation of tryptophan and several non-natural substrates. This initial evolution of RebH not only provides improved enzymes for immediate synthetic applications, but also establishes a robust protocol for further halogenase evolution.
Co-reporter:Hao Yang;Poonam Srivastava;Chen Zhang ; Jared C. Lewis
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 2) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201490000
Co-reporter:Landon J. Durak and Jared C. Lewis
Organometallics 2014 Volume 33(Issue 3) pp:620-623
Publication Date(Web):January 30, 2014
DOI:10.1021/om401221v
A Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction between Cp*(PMe3)IrBn2 and aryl halides was developed. Examining the scope of this reaction led to the discovery that Cp*(PMe3)IrMeCl activates C–H bonds on arene substrates that undergo subsequent Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling with aryl iodides. This Ir-promoted, Pd-catalyzed direct arylation is notable for its distal selectivity on substituted arenes lacking directing groups or a particular electronic bias.
Co-reporter:Jared C. Lewis
ACS Catalysis 2013 Volume 3(Issue 12) pp:2954
Publication Date(Web):October 30, 2013
DOI:10.1021/cs400806a
Transition metal catalysts and enzymes possess unique and often complementary properties that have made them important tools for chemical synthesis. The potential practical benefits of catalysts that combine these properties and a desire to understand how the structure and reactivity of metal and peptide components affect each other have driven researchers to create hybrid metal–peptide catalysts since the 1970s. The hybrid catalysts developed to date possess unique compositions of matter at the inorganic/biological interface that often pose significant challenges from design, synthesis, and characterization perspectives. Despite these obstacles, researchers have developed systems in which secondary coordination sphere effects impart selectivity to metal catalysts, accelerate chemical reactions, and are systematically optimized via directed evolution. This perspective outlines fundamental principles, key developments, and future prospects for the design, preparation, and application of peptide- and protein-based hybrid catalysts for organic transformations.Keywords: artificial metalloenzymes; catalysis; evolution; metallopeptide; molecular recognition
Co-reporter:James T. Payne;Mary C. Andorfer ; Jared C. Lewis
Angewandte Chemie 2013 Volume 125( Issue 20) pp:5379-5382
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201300762
Co-reporter:James T. Payne;Mary C. Andorfer ; Jared C. Lewis
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2013 Volume 52( Issue 20) pp:5271-5274
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201300762
Co-reporter:Landon J. Durak and Jared C. Lewis
Organometallics 2013 Volume 32(Issue 11) pp:3153-3156
Publication Date(Web):May 16, 2013
DOI:10.1021/om400289s
Transmetalation of alkyl and carboxylate ligands between Cp*(PMe3)Ir complexes and d8 Pt and Pd complexes is described. Studies on the scope and kinetics of this reaction support a mechanism in which carboxylate dissociation from the Pt or Pd center precedes alkyl transfer from Ir. Subsequent reaction of the resulting Pt or Pd alkyl complex enables functionalization of the hydrocarbyl ligands and suggests new opportunities for catalytic, nondirected C–C and C–H bond functionalization reactions.
Co-reporter:Zhihui Zhang, Hao Yang, Chen Zhang, and Jared C. Lewis
Organometallics 2012 Volume 31(Issue 21) pp:7328-7331
Publication Date(Web):October 18, 2012
DOI:10.1021/om300848p
Two approaches to prepare amino acids with catalytically active organometallic side chains are presented. These methods are notable in that they provide access either free or N-protected compounds that are structurally analogous to naturally occurring amino acids. The N-protected organometallic amino acids are compatible with standard peptide coupling conditions and can be used to prepare catalytically active metallopeptides.
Co-reporter:David M Upp, Jared C Lewis
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology (April 2017) Volume 37() pp:48-55
Publication Date(Web):April 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2016.12.027
Co-reporter:Joseph J. Gair, Brandon E. Haines, Alexander S. Filatov, Djamaladdin G. Musaev and Jared C. Lewis
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2017 - vol. 8(Issue 8) pp:NaN5756-5756
Publication Date(Web):2017/06/16
DOI:10.1039/C7SC01674C
Mono-protected amino acid (MPAA) ligands are used in a number of Pd-catalyzed C–H functionalization reactions. MPAAs have been proposed to bind to Pd(II) via κ2-(N,O) coordination, but such binding has not yet been experimentally validated. Herein, we report the synthesis and detailed characterization of a series of MPAA complexes prepared via cyclopalladation of dimethylbenzylamine in the presence of MPAAs. The isolated complexes exist as μ-carboxylato (MPAA) bridged dimers and feature potential M–M cooperativity and secondary sphere hydrogen bonding. Selective MPAA coordination and relay of stereochemistry, previously suggested to uniquely result from κ2-(N,O) MPAA coordination, are both observed. The isolated MPAA complexes undergo C–C and C–X (X = Cl, Br, I) bond formation when treated with electrophiles used for catalytic C–H functionalization. Stoichiometric iodination of MPAA palladacycles was found to proceed via a dinuclear palladium species with one equivalent of iodine in the rate limiting transition structure, and the isolated complexes also served as viable precatalysts for catalytic C–H functionalization. Together, these results provide a number of insights into the reactivity of Pd-MPAA complexes relevant to C–H bond functionalization.
Co-reporter:Mary C. Andorfer, Hyun June Park, Jaylie Vergara-Coll and Jared C. Lewis
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2016 - vol. 7(Issue 6) pp:NaN3729-3729
Publication Date(Web):2016/02/19
DOI:10.1039/C5SC04680G
RebH variants capable of chlorinating substituted indoles ortho-, meta-, and para- to the indole nitrogen were evolved by directly screening for altered selectivity on deuterium-substituted probe substrates using mass spectrometry. This systematic approach allowed for rapid accumulation of beneficial mutations using simple adaptive walks and should prove generally useful for altering and optimizing the selectivity of C–H functionalization catalysts. Analysis of the beneficial mutations showed that structure-guided selection of active site residues for targeted mutagenesis can be complicated either by activity/selectivity tradeoffs that reduce the possibility of detecting such mutations or by epistatic effects that actually eliminate the benefits of a mutation in certain contexts. As a corollary to this finding, the precise manner in which the beneficial mutations identified led to the observed changes in RebH selectivity is not clear. Docking simulations suggest that tryptamine binds to these variants as tryptophan does to native halogenases, but structural studies will be required to confirm these models and shed light on how particular mutations impact tryptamine binding. Similar directed evolution efforts on other enzymes or artificial metalloenzymes could enable a wide range of C–H functionalization reactions.