Enzyme-catalysed [6+4] cycloadditions in the biosynthesis of natural products
- PMID: 30867595
- PMCID: PMC6944468
- DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1021-x
Enzyme-catalysed [6+4] cycloadditions in the biosynthesis of natural products
Abstract
Pericyclic reactions are powerful transformations for the construction of carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds in organic synthesis. Their role in biosynthesis is increasingly apparent, and mechanisms by which pericyclases can catalyse reactions are of major interest1. [4+2] cycloadditions (Diels-Alder reactions) have been widely used in organic synthesis2 for the formation of six-membered rings and are now well-established in biosynthesis3-6. [6+4] and other 'higher-order' cycloadditions were predicted7 in 1965, and are now increasingly common in the laboratory despite challenges arising from the generation of a highly strained ten-membered ring system8,9. However, although enzyme-catalysed [6+4] cycloadditions have been proposed10-12, they have not been proven to occur. Here we demonstrate a group of enzymes that catalyse a pericyclic [6+4] cycloaddition, which is a crucial step in the biosynthesis of streptoseomycin-type natural products. This type of pericyclase catalyses [6+4] and [4+2] cycloadditions through a single ambimodal transition state, which is consistent with previous proposals11,12. The [6+4] product is transformed to a less stable [4+2] adduct via a facile Cope rearrangement, and the [4+2] adduct is converted into the natural product enzymatically. Crystal structures of three pericyclases, computational simulations of potential energies and molecular dynamics, and site-directed mutagenesis establish the mechanism of this transformation. This work shows how enzymes are able to catalyse concerted pericyclic reactions involving ambimodal transition states.
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References
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- Takao K, Munakata R & Tadano K Recent advances in natural product synthesis by using intramolecular Diels–Alder reactions. Chem. Rev. 105, 4779–4807 (2005). - PubMed
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- Tian Z et al. An enzymatic [4+2] cyclization cascade creates the pentacyclic core of pyrroindomycins. Nat. Chem. Biol. 11, 259–265 (2015). - PubMed
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