Reversing the Enantioselectivity of Enzymatic Carbene N−H Insertion Through Mechanism-Guided Protein Engineering
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We report a computationally driven approach to access enantiodivergent enzymatic carbene N−H insertions catalyzed by P411 enzymes. Computational modeling was employed to rationally guide engineering efforts to control the accessible conformations of a key lactone-carbene (LAC) intermediate in the enzyme active site by installing a new H-bond anchoring point. This H-bonding interaction controls the relative orientation of the reactive carbene intermediate, orienting it for an enantioselective N-nucleophilic attack by the amine substrate. By combining MD simulations and site-saturation mutagenesis and screening targeted to only two key residues, we were able to reverse the stereoselectivity of previously engineered S-selective P411 enzymes. The resulting variant, L5_FL-B3, accepts a broad scope of amine substrates for N−H insertion with excellent yields (up to >99 %), high efficiency (up to 12 300 TTN), and good enantiocontrol (up to 7 : 93 er)