The Broad Aryl Acid Specificity of the Amide Bond Synthetase McbA Suggests Potential for the Biocatalytic Synthesis of Amides

Mark Petchey, Anibal Cuetos, Benjamin Rowlinson, Stephanie Dannevald, Amina Frese, Peter W. Sutton, Sarah Lovelock, Richard C. Lloyd, Ian J. S. Fairlamb, Gideon Grogan

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Amide bond formation is one of the most important reactions in pharmaceutical synthetic chemistry. The development of sustainable methods for amide bond formation, including those that are catalyzed by enzymes, is therefore of significant interest. The ATP‐dependent amide bond synthetase (ABS) enzyme McbA, from Marinactinospora thermotolerans, catalyzes the formation of amides as part of the biosynthetic pathway towards the marinacarboline secondary metabolites. The reaction proceeds via an adenylate intermediate, with both adenylation and amidation steps catalyzed within one active site. In this study, McbA was applied to the synthesis of pharmaceutical‐type amides from a range of aryl carboxylic acids with partner amines provided at 1–5 molar equivalents. The structure of McbA revealed the structural determinants of aryl acid substrate tolerance and differences in conformation associated with the two half reactions catalyzed. The catalytic performance of McbA, coupled with the structure, suggest that this and other ABS enzymes may be engineered for applications in the sustainable synthesis of pharmaceutically relevant (chiral) amides.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)11584-11588
    JournalAngewandte Chemie International Edition
    Volume57
    Issue number36
    Early online date23 Jul 2018
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

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