The secrets of biocatalysis: adaptation of epoxide hydrolase enzyme from Bacillus megaterium for drug synthesis
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Since the beginning of life, it can be found in Nature biomolecules that make all the chemical
reactions necessary for life. These biomolecules known as enzymes are indeed the most
efficient, specific and selective catalyst known. This has led to biocatalysis, the use of
enzymes to catalyse the transformation of organic compounds. Despite the great
advantages, there are lots of reactions of industrial interest that cannot be carried out with
high efficiencies by natural enzymes. This has led to enzyme engineering, whose job is to
modify and apply laboratory evolved enzymes for new purposes for which they were not
originally designed.
As mentioned above, enzymes found in Nature usually do not reach the requirements of
pharmaceutical and fine chemical industries. In some cases, it may be due to its low
regioselectivity and enantioselectivity towards non-natural substrates of industrial interests.
In others, it may be caused by the narrow substrate scope of the WT enzyme, which, for
example, does not allow the bioresolution of bulky substrates. This could be one of the main
drawbacks related to epoxide hydrolases (EHs) enzyme of Bacillus megaterium (BmEH), the
enzyme of interest in this research work. BmEH enzyme shows activity towards bulky
substrates, such as naphthyl glycidyl ether (NGE) (valuable precursor of propranolol beta
blocker drug), but nevertheless its efficiency is worse compared to those observed by the
natural phenyl glycidyl ether (PGE) substrate.
In general, EHs are a type of enzymes belonging to the a,b-hydrolase family that are able of
performing selective asymmetric epoxide hydrations. In particular, BmEH catalyses the
opening of the epoxide ring of the (R)-enantiomer of the PGE, leaving the (S) enantiomer
ideally unreacted, which is interesting because the (S) enantiomer is a valuable intermediate
beta-blocker of the alprenolol drug. Although the general mechanism of EHs is currently
known, details of processes that occur before (substrate binding) and/or after (product
release) are not yet known. For this reason, the aim of this study is to understand the
conformational dynamics of the BmEH natural enzyme in the presence of each enantiomer
of PGE (BmEH – (R/S)-PGE system) through Molecular Dynamic (MD) simulations