Shortening Synthetic Routes to Small Molecule Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients Employing Biocatalytic Methods
Author(s) -
Stefan Simić,
Erna Zukić,
Luca Schmermund,
Kurt Faber,
Christoph K. Winkler,
Wolfgang Kroutil
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
chemical reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 20.528
H-Index - 700
eISSN - 1520-6890
pISSN - 0009-2665
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemrev.1c00574
Subject(s) - biocatalysis , chemistry , biochemical engineering , combinatorial chemistry , drug discovery , small molecule , nanotechnology , computational biology , organic chemistry , biochemistry , reaction mechanism , catalysis , materials science , engineering , biology
Biocatalysis, using enzymes for organic synthesis, has emerged as powerful tool for the synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). The first industrial biocatalytic processes launched in the first half of the last century exploited whole-cell microorganisms where the specific enzyme at work was not known. In the meantime, novel molecular biology methods, such as efficient gene sequencing and synthesis, triggered breakthroughs in directed evolution for the rapid development of process-stable enzymes with broad substrate scope and good selectivities tailored for specific substrates. To date, enzymes are employed to enable shorter, more efficient, and more sustainable alternative routes toward (established) small molecule APIs, and are additionally used to perform standard reactions in API synthesis more efficiently. Herein, large-scale synthetic routes containing biocatalytic key steps toward >130 APIs of approved drugs and drug candidates are compared with the corresponding chemical protocols (if available) regarding the steps, reaction conditions, and scale. The review is structured according to the functional group formed in the reaction.
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