Biocatalytic N-Halogenation Enabled by Vanadium-Dependent Haloperoxidases

18 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Nitrogen-containing compounds are valuable synthetic intermediates and targets in nearly every chemical industry. While methods for nitrogen-carbon and nitrogen-heteroatom bond formation have primarily relied on nucleophilic nitrogen atom reactivity, molecules containing nitrogen-halogen bonds allow for reactivity through electrophilic or radical mechanisms at the nitrogen center. Despite the growing synthetic utility of nitrogen-halogen-containing compounds, selective catalytic strategies for their synthesis are largely underexplored. We recently discovered that the vanadium-dependent haloperoxidase (VHPO) class of enzymes are a suitable biocatalyst platform for nitrogen-halogen bond formation. Herein, we show that VHPOs perform selective halogenation of a range of substituted benzamidine hydrochlorides to produce the corresponding N’-halobenzimidamides. This biocatalytic platform is applied to the synthesis of 1,2,4-oxadiazoles from the corresponding N-acylbenzamidines in high yield and with excellent chemoselectivity. Finally, the synthetic applicability of this biotechnology is demonstrated in an extension to nitrogen-nitrogen bond formation and the chemoenzymatic synthesis of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy treatment, ataluren.

Keywords

biocatalysis
halogenation
vanadium haloperoxidase

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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This PDF file includes: Materials and Methods Product Characterizationz Supplementary Text Figs. S1-S5 Spectral Data References
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