A concise synthesis of single‐enantiomer β‐lactams and β‐amino acids using Rhodococcus globerulus |
| |
Authors: | Michael Lloyd Richard Lloyd Philip Keene Andrew Osborne |
| |
Affiliation: | Dowpharma, Chirotech Technology Ltd, Unit 162, Cambridge Science Park, Milton Road, Cambridge CB4 0GH, UK |
| |
Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Pharmaceutical companies continue to evaluate β‐amino acids and β‐lactams in a range of drug candidates. The development of a highly efficient and selective bioresolution of cyclic β‐lactam substrates could yield enantiopure lactams and β‐amino acids with medicinal potential. The aim of this work was to discover and develop a biocatalyst capable of selectively hydrolysing β‐lactam substrates. RESULTS: Screening of our in‐house culture collection led to the discovery of a microorganism, Rhodococcus globerulus (NCIMB 41042) with β‐lactamase activity. Whole‐cell bioresolutions of the β‐lactams 1–4 were successfully carried out and in all cases enantiomeric excesses of the residual lactam and amino acid product were found to be greater than 98%. For one example, the bioresolution was optimised to operate at 60 g L?1 substrate concentration with a 20% wt/wt cell paste loading. CONCLUSION: A microorganism, Rhodococcus globerulus (NCIMB 41042), capable of selectively hydrolysing a range of cyclic β‐lactams, has been discovered. A scalable whole‐cell bioresolution process has been developed, leading to the synthesis of multigram quantities of enantiomerically pure β‐lactams and β‐amino acids. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry |
| |
Keywords: | β ‐lactamase bioresolution Rhodococcus globerulus whole cell β ‐amino acid |
|
|