Biphasic Catalysis with Disaccharide Phosphorylases: Chemoenzymatic Synthesis of α‑d‑Glucosides Using Sucrose Phosphorylase

Thanks to its broad acceptor specificity, sucrose phosphorylase (SP) has been exploited for the transfer of glucose to a wide variety of acceptor molecules. Unfortunately, the low affinity (K m > 1 M) of SP towards these acceptors typically urges the addition of cosolvents, which often either fai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organic process research & development 2014-06, Vol.18 (6), p.781-787
Hauptverfasser: De Winter, Karel, Desmet, Tom, Devlamynck, Tim, Van Renterghem, Lisa, Verhaeghe, Tom, Pelantová, Helena, Křen, Vladimír, Soetaert, Wim
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Thanks to its broad acceptor specificity, sucrose phosphorylase (SP) has been exploited for the transfer of glucose to a wide variety of acceptor molecules. Unfortunately, the low affinity (K m > 1 M) of SP towards these acceptors typically urges the addition of cosolvents, which often either fail to dissolve sufficient substrate or progressively give rise to enzyme inhibition and denaturation. In this work, a buffer/ethyl acetate ratio of 5:3 was identified to be the optimal solvent system, allowing the use of SP in biphasic systems. Careful optimization of the reaction conditions enabled the synthesis of a range of α-d-glucosides, such as cinnamyl α-d-glucopyranoside, geranyl α-d-glucopyranoside, 2-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl pyrogallol, and series of alkyl gallyl 4-O-α-d-glucopyranosides. The usefulness of biphasic catalysis was further illustrated by comparing the glucosylation of pyrogallol in a cosolvent and biphasic reaction system. The acceptor yield for the former reached only 17.4%, whereas roughly 60% of the initial pyrogallol was converted when using biphasic catalysis.
ISSN:1083-6160
1520-586X
DOI:10.1021/op400302b