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Synthesis of 2,6‐Dihalogenated Purine Nucleosides by Thermostable Nucleoside Phosphorylases
Author(s) -
Zhou Xinrui,
Szeker Kathleen,
Jiao LinYu,
Oestreich Martin,
Mikhailopulo Igor A.,
Neubauer Peter
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
advanced synthesis and catalysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.541
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1615-4169
pISSN - 1615-4150
DOI - 10.1002/adsc.201400966
Subject(s) - chemistry , uracil , biocatalysis , substrate (aquarium) , nucleoside , uridine , purine , enzyme , yield (engineering) , purine metabolism , stereochemistry , catalysis , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , biochemistry , reaction mechanism , dna , rna , oceanography , gene , geology , materials science , metallurgy
The enzymatic transglycosylation of 2,6‐dichloropurine (26DCP) and 6‐chloro‐2‐fluoropurine (6C2FP) with uridine, thymidine and 1‐(β‐ D ‐arabinofuranosyl)‐uracil as the pentofuranose donors and recombinant thermostable nucleoside phosphorylases from G. thermoglucosidasius or T. thermophilus as biocatalysts was studied. Selection of 26DCP and 6C2FP as substrates is determined by their higher solubility in aqueous buffer solutions compared to most natural and modified purines and, furthermore, synthesized nucleosides are valuable precursors for the preparation of a large number of biologically important nucleosides. The substrate activity of 26DCP and 6C2FP in the synthesis of their ribo ‐ and 2′‐ deoxyribo ‐nucleosides was closely similar to that of related 2‐amino‐ (DAP), 2‐chloro‐ and 2‐fluoroadenines; the efficiency of the synthesis of β‐ D ‐arabinofuranosides of 26DCP and 6C2FP was lower vs. that of DAP under similar reaction conditions. For a convenient and easier recovery of the biocatalysts, the thermostable enzymes were immobilized on MagReSyn ® epoxide beads and the biocatalyst showed high catalytic efficiency in a number of reactions. As an example, 6‐chloro‐2‐fluoro‐(β‐ D ‐ribofuranosyl)‐purine ( 9 ), a precursor of various antiviral and antitumour drugs, was synthesized by the immobilized enzymes at 60 °C under high substrate concentrations (uridine:purine ratio of 2:1, mol). The synthesis was successfully scaled‐up [uridine (2.5 mmol), base (1.25 mmol); reaction mixture 50 mL] to afford 9 in 60% yield. The reaction reveals the great practical potential of this enzymatic method for the efficient production of modified purine nucleosides of pharmaceutical interest.

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