Discovery and Mechanistic Understanding of a Lipase from Rhizorhabdus dicambivorans for Efficient Ester Aminolysis in Aromatic Amines

Author:

Wang Jialing1,Huang Zhuangzhuang1,Xu Haodong2,Nian Yong2,Wu Bin1ORCID,He Bingfang3,Schenk Gerhard4

Affiliation:

1. College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering Nanjing Tech University 30 Puzhunan road Nanjing 211816 Jiangsu China

2. College of Pharmacy Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine 138 Xianlin road Nanjing 210023 Jiangsu China

3. School of Pharmaceutical Sciences Nanjing Tech University 30 Puzhunan road Nanjing 211816 Jiangsu China

4. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland St. Lucia Brisbane QLD 4072 Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe formation of amide bonds via aminolysis of esters by lipases generates a diverse range of amide frameworks in biosynthetic chemistry. Few lipases have satisfactory activity towards bulky aromatic amines despite numerous attempts to improve the efficiency of this transformation. Here, we report the discovery of a new intracellular lipase (Ndbn) with a broad substrate scope. Ndbn turns over a range of esters and aromatic amines in the presence of water (2 %; v/v), producing a high yield of multiple valuable amides. Remarkably, a higher conversion rate was observed for the synthesis of amides from substrates with aromatic amine rather than aliphatic amines. Molecular dynamics (MD) and quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) studies showcase the mechanism for the preference for aromatic amines, including a more suitable orientation, shorter catalytic distances in the active site pocket and a lower reaction barrier for aromatic than for aliphatic amines. This unique lipase is thus a promising biocatalyst for the efficient synthesis of aromatic amides.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine

Publisher

Wiley

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