Publications
ACS CatalysisSep 2021 |
12433-12445
DOI:
10.1021/acscatal.1c02786

Machine-Directed Evolution of an Imine Reductase for Activity and Stereoselectivity

Ma, Eric J.; Siirola, Elina; Moore, Charles; Kummer, Arkadij; Stoeckli, Markus; Faller, Michael; Bouquet, Caroline; Eggimann, Fabian; Ligibel, Mathieu; Huynh, Dan; Cutler, Geoffrey; Siegrist, Luca; Lewis, Richard A.; Acker, Anne-Christine; Freund, Ernst; Koch, Elke; Vogel, Markus; Schlingensiepen, Holger; Oakeley, Edward J.; Snajdrova, Radka
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Abstract
[Abstract Image] Biocatalysis is an effective tool to access chiral molecules that are otherwise hard to synthesize or purify. Time-efficient processes are needed to develop enzymes that adequately perform the desired chemistry. We evaluated machine-directed evolution as an enzyme engineering strategy using a moderately stereoselective imine reductase as the model system. We compared machine-directed evolution approaches to deep mutational scanning (DMS) and error-prone PCR. Within one cycle, it was found that machine-directed evolution yielded a library of high-activity mutants with a dramatically shifted activity distribution compared to that of traditional directed evolution. Structure-guided analysis revealed that linear additivity might provide a simple explanation for the effectiveness of machine-directed evolution. The most active and selective enzyme mutant, which was identified through DMS and error-prone PCR, was used for the gram-scale synthesis of the H4 receptor antagonist ZPL389 with full conversion, > 99% ee (_R_), and a 72% yield.
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