Structural and mechanistic insights into oxidative biaryl coupling to form the arylomycin core by an engineered CYP450

Abstract

Arylomycin, a potent antibiotic targeting bacterial signal peptidase, is difficult to synthesize experimentally due to its poor to moderate yields and the formation of a mixture of compounds. A recent experimental bioengineering work shows that the core of arylomycin can be efficiently synthesized by engineering the cytochrome P450 enzyme from Streptomyces sp.; however, the mechanism of the same was not elucidated. Herein, we have thoroughly investigated the mechanism behind the evolution of the enzyme for the synthesis of the arylomycin core via C–C bond formation in the CYP450 enzyme using hybrid QM/MM calculations, MD simulations, and DFT calculations. We show that strategic mutations such as (a) G-101 → A facilitate biaryl coupling by subtly pushing the substrate and (b) the Q-306 → H mutation creates a strong pi–pi interaction with the substrate that brings the two phenol rings of the substrate closer to undergo C–C coupling. Importantly, our QM/MM calculations show that for efficient C–C formation, the reaction should proceed via the biradical mechanism rather than hydroxylation.

Graphical abstract: Structural and mechanistic insights into oxidative biaryl coupling to form the arylomycin core by an engineered CYP450

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Aug 2024
Accepted
31 Oct 2024
First published
06 Nov 2024

Dalton Trans., 2024, Advance Article

Structural and mechanistic insights into oxidative biaryl coupling to form the arylomycin core by an engineered CYP450

V. Kardam, V. Bhatt and K. D. Dubey, Dalton Trans., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4DT02197E

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