Naomi A.
Barton
a,
Benjamin J.
Marsh
a,
William
Lewis
a,
Nathalie
Narraidoo
b,
Graham B.
Seymour
b,
Rupert
Fray
b and
Christopher J.
Hayes
*a
aSchool of Chemistry, University of Nottingham, University Park, NG7 2RD, Nottingham, UK
bDivision of Plant and Crop Sciences, School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonnington, LE12 5RD, Loughborough, UK. E-mail: chris.hayes@nottingham.ac.uk; Fax: +44 (0)115 951 3564; Tel: +44 (0)115 951 3045
First published on 26th January 2016
We have shown for the first time that taxadiene (3) can be epoxidised in a regio- and diastereoselective manner to provide taxadiene-4(5)-epoxide (12) as a single diastereoisomer, and that this epoxide can be rearranged to give taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4). Furthermore, the epoxide 12 rearranges under acidic conditions to give taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4), the known bridged ether OCT (5) and the new oxacyclotaxane (OCT2) 15. Contrary to previous speculation, taxadiene-4(5)-epoxide (12) is susceptible to rearrangement when exposed to an ironIII porphyrin, and these observations justify consideration of epoxide 12 as a chemically competent intermediate on the taxol biosynthetic pathway.
The first committed step in the taxol biosynthetic pathway (Scheme 1) is the taxadiene synthase-catalysed cyclisation of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate 1 to produce taxa-4(5),11(12)-diene (3).4 The remaining biosynthetic steps involve a series of oxidation, and functional group interconversion processes, the first of which is the taxadiene-5α-hydroxylase-mediated oxidation of 3 into taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4).5
A number of research groups have reported the over-production of taxa-4(5),11(12)-diene (3) in a variety of chassis organisms (yeast,6 tobacco,7E. coli,8 tomato9), and the incorporation of both taxadiene synthase and its 5α-hydroxylase (tobacco,7E. coli8a) has also been described. In 2008 Rontein showed that overexpression of both taxadiene synthase and taxa-4(5),11(12)-diene 5-hydroxylase (CYP725A4) in tobacco (Nicotiana sylvestris) did not produce taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) as expected, but instead led to the production of 5(12)-oxa-3(11)-cyclotaxane (OCT) 5 (Scheme 2).7
Scheme 2 Production of oxidised taxanes in metabolically engineered tobacco and E. coli containing both taxadiene synthase and taxadiene hydroxylase. |
In 2010 Stephanopoulos reported a significant improvement in this area using E. coli as the chassis organism.8a Under their optimised conditions, taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) could be produced, but unfortunately the desired product 4 was obtained as a 1:1 mixture with OCT (5), thus severely limiting the amount of 4 being produced. These two studies clearly demonstrate that the presence of both taxadiene synthase and taxadiene-5α-hydroxylase in a metabolically engineered chassis organism does not guarantee satisfactory production of taxadien-5-ol 4, and the catalytic promiscuity and multispecificity of taxadiene-5α-hydroxylase has attracted recent attention.10
Our current understanding of the taxadiene-5α-hydroxylase oxidation mechanism is derived from experiments performed by Williams and Croteau (Scheme 3).5 The observation that taxadiene-containing microsomes could convert both the 4(5)-3 (Scheme 1) and the 4(20)-6 alkene isomers of taxadiene to taxadien-5-ol 4 with equal efficiency (Scheme 3, eqn (1)), lead Williams and Croteau to suggest an H-atom abstraction/oxygen rebound mechanism, via the allylic radical 10, as being the most likely (path A, Scheme 4).
Scheme 4 Taxadiene hydroxylase mediated oxidation of taxa-4(5),11(12)-diene (3) to taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4). |
An alternative pathway involving epoxidation of 3 to give 12, followed by rearrangement to give 4 (path B, Scheme 4) was also considered, but was eventually discounted by the fact that the 4(20)-alkene isomer 6 is also converted to 4 by taxadiene hydroxylase (via a process unlikely to involve 12).5 This conclusion was further supported by the fact that the epoxide 12 has not been observed as an oxidation product of 3 in any studies reported thus far. In order to provide further evidence for the H-atom abstraction/oxygen rebound mechanism (path A, Scheme 4), Williams et al. prepared deuterium-labelled [C20–2H3]-taxadiene (7) and subjected this to taxadiene hydroxylase. However, under these conditions, the expected kinetic isotope effect was not observed for the transformation of 7 to 8 (Scheme 3, eqn (2)),5 which is at odds with the proposed H-atom abstraction process. Furthermore, Williams et al. report that their experiment ‘unexpectedly revealed that the deuterated substrate yielded slightly more taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol than did the unlabeled substrate’,5b thus indicating a small inverse isotope effect. This experimental observation actually supports the epoxide/rearrangement route for the conversion of 3 to 4, as small inverse secondary isotope effects are observed in epoxidation reactions,11 but no further experiments have been reported to examine this possibility.
The production of OCT 5, along with additional oxidation products, in engineered taxadiene synthase/taxadiene hydroxylase-containing organisms7,8a lead us to question whether epoxide 12 could be an intermediate in the taxadiene hydroxylase mechanism as we could envisage viable pathways for the production of both 4 and 5 from epoxide 12. Therefore, we decided to synthesise 12 and study it's chemistry in the context of the early stages of the taxol biosynthetic pathway.
Whilst the epoxide derived from 6 was not observed, the recovered taxadiene (20%) was significantly enriched in 6 (1:2; 3:6) compared to the starting material (17:1; 3:6), thus indicating that 3 is much more reactive towards epoxidation than 6. Care had to be taken during chromatography on silica gel as the epoxide 12 was acid sensitive (vide infra). Treatment of taxadiene (3) with excess DMDO (2 equivalents), produced the bis-epoxide 13 in 75% yield, and this epoxide was found to be much more stable than 12 to chromatography on silica gel (Scheme 5).
Fig. 1 X-ray crystal structure of the taxadiene derived epoxyalcohol 14.† |
In order to simulate the acid-mediated decomposition encountered during silica gel chromatography, the epoxide 12 was treated with silica gel in C6D6 at 70 °C. Reaction progress was monitored by 1H NMR (see ESI†), and we determined that 12 converts into OCT (5), the molecule that had previously been produced in metabolically engineered tobacco by Rontein (Scheme 7),7 and the new isomeric oxacyclotaxane 15 (OCT2). Complete conversion of epoxide 12 was observed, as judged by the loss of the C19 methyl 1H NMR signal at 0.58 ppm, and the isomeric bridged ethers 5 and 15 were produced in an approximately 3:2 ratio (1H NMR). Chromatographic separation gave isolated samples of 5 (19%) and 15 (19%), which were then fully characterised.
Treatment of epoxide 12 with a stronger acid (pTSA, C6D6) gave taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) as the major new product, with OCT (5) and OCT2 (15) being produced as minor products (isolated yields: 4 (17%); 5 (7%); 15 (7%)). The formation of 4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) from the epoxide 12 under these strongly acidic conditions is readily explained by invoking protonation of the epoxide 12 to produce 16 (Scheme 8). Ring-opening then affords the cation 17, and loss of a proton from the C20 methyl group installs the exo-methylene group in 4 (Scheme 8). The formation of OCT (5) also implicates the cation 17 as an intermediate. A 1,2-hydride shift first produces the new tertiary cation 18, which next undergoes transannulation with the C11(12)-alkene leading to the cation 19. Etherification, involving trapping the cation 19 with the secondary hydroxyl, then gives OCT (5). Similarly, the formation of OCT2 (15) can be rationalised by invoking a 1,2-alkyl shift of the tertiary cation 19, leading to the new tertiary cation 20, which is then trapped as the ether 15 by reacting with the C5-hydroxyl (Scheme 8).
Scheme 8 Proposed mechanisms for the formation of taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4), OCT (5) and OCT2 (15) from taxadiene-4(5)-epoxide (12). |
As the biological oxidant (taxadiene hydroxylase5) acting upon taxadiene is a cytochrome P450, it is tempting to speculate that the reduced ironIII porphyrin (11, Scheme 4) is capable of facilitating a Lewis acid-catalysed rearrangement of the epoxide in vivo. Rontein, however, discounted this proposal17 on the basis that previous work on very different chemical systems has shown that ironIII porphyrins are poor catalysts for the rearrangement of epoxides.15 As we had access to the epoxide 12, we could test this hypothesis experimentally, and we decided to treat 12 with an ironIII porphyrin.
Contrary to the literature hypothesis, we were pleased to find that treatment of 12 with FeIII(TPP)Cl (2 equiv.) in C6D6 at 25 °C for 72 hours, lead to epoxide rearrangement, with the production of OCT (5) and OCT2 (15) as the main new products in a 1:1 ratio (1H NMR). Formation of taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) was not observed under these Lewis acidic conditions (Scheme 9). As a control experiment, we exposed the similarly-substituted cyclogeraniol-derived epoxide 2216 to the same Fe(TPP)Cl rearrangement conditions,17 and as expected from previous reports,15 no rearrangement was observed, thus highlighting the propensity of 12 to rearrange.
Having shown that the two step epoxidation/FeIII induced rearrangement mimics that seen in vivo (tobacco) mediated by taxa-4(5),11(12)-diene 5-hydroxylase (CYP725A4), we wondered if the initial oxidation of taxadiene could also be achieved using the FeIII(TPP)Cl catalyst and a suitable stoichiometric oxidant (Scheme 10). Thus, treatment of taxadiene (3) with FeIII(TPP)Cl (10 mol%) and hydrogen peroxide (1 equiv.)18 lead to complete consumption of starting material (as judged by t.l.c. and 1H NMR), and the subsequent production of oxidation products. Although the isolated yields were low, 1H NMR of the crude reaction mixture showed that the two major products were OCT (5) and the OCT2 (15). The production of taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4) was not observed under these conditions (Scheme 10).
Scheme 11 Proposal for the role of epoxide 12 in the biosynthesis of taxa-4(20),11(12)-dien-5α-ol (4). |
It is possible that 4(5)-alkene isomer 3 is epoxidised to produce 12, which is then rearranged to 4, by the action of the reduced form of the hydroxylase 11. In contrast, the 4(20)-alkene isomer 6 could be converted directly to 4via the accepted H-atom abstraction mechanism. The involvement of epoxide 12 in the pathway provides an explanation for the lack of a significant primary kinetic isotope effect and the presence of an inverse secondary isotope effect when deuterium labelled [C20–2H3]-taxadiene (7) was oxidized by taxadiene hydroxylase. The labelled C20 methyl likely plays only a small role in the epoxidation process (i.e. leads to small inverse isotope effect), and loss of a proton from C20 in an intermediate such as 19 (Scheme 8) is unlikely to be rate-limiting.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Full experimental procedures and copies of 1H and 13C NMR spectra. CCDC 1030909. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/c5sc03463a |
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