The use of biocatalysis to obtain enantiopure compounds can be divided into two different methods: • Kinetic resolution of a racemic mixture • Biocatalyzed asymmetric synthesis In
kinetic resolution of a racemic mixture, the presence of a chiral object (the enzyme) converts one of the stereoisomers of the reactant into its product at a greater
reaction rate than for the other reactant stereoisomer. The stereochemical mixture has now been transformed into a mixture of two different compounds, making them separable by normal methodology. Biocatalyzed kinetic resolution is utilized extensively in the purification of racemic mixtures of synthetic amino acids. Many popular amino acid synthesis routes, such as the
Strecker Synthesis, result in a mixture of R and S enantiomers. This mixture can be purified by (I) acylating the amine using an anhydride and then (II) selectively deacylating only the L enantiomer using hog kidney acylase. These enzymes are typically extremely selective for one enantiomer leading to very large differences in rate, allowing for selective deacylation. Finally the two products are now separable by classical techniques, such as
chromatography. The maximum yield in such kinetic resolutions is 50%, since a yield of more than 50% means that some of wrong isomer also has reacted, giving a lower
enantiomeric excess. Such reactions must therefore be terminated before equilibrium is reached. If it is possible to perform such resolutions under conditions where the two substrate- enantiomers are racemizing continuously, all substrate may in theory be converted into enantiopure product. This is called
dynamic resolution. In
biocatalyzed asymmetric synthesis, a non-chiral unit becomes chiral in such a way that the different possible stereoisomers are formed in different quantities. The chirality is introduced into the substrate by influence of enzyme, which is chiral.
Yeast is a biocatalyst for the enantioselective
reduction of
ketones. The
Baeyer–Villiger oxidation is another example of a biocatalytic reaction. In one study a specially designed mutant of
Candida antarctica was found to be an effective catalyst for the
Michael addition of
acrolein with
acetylacetone at 20 °C in absence of additional solvent. Another study demonstrates how racemic
nicotine (mixture of S and R-enantiomers
1 in
scheme 3) can be deracemized in a
one-pot procedure involving a monoamine oxidase isolated from
Aspergillus niger which is able to oxidize only the
amine S-enantiomer to the
imine 2 and involving an
ammonia–
borane reducing couple which can reduce the imine
2 back to the amine
1. In this way the S-enantiomer will continuously be consumed by the enzyme while the R-enantiomer accumulates. It is even possible to
stereoinvert pure S to pure R. == Photoredox enabled biocatalysis ==