SCIENCE sciencemag.org
GRAPHIC: A. KITTERMAN/
SC
IENCE
By Elaine O’Reilly and James Ryan
N
atural biosynthesis assembles a
vast array of complex natural prod-
ucts starting from a limited set of
building blocks, under physiologi-
cal conditions, and in the presence
of numerous other biomolecules.
Organisms rely on the extraordinary se-
lectivity of enzymes and their ability to
operate under similar reaction conditions,
meaning that these catalysts are perfectly
adapted to mediate cascade reactions. In
these multistep processes, the product of
one biocatalytic step becomes the sub-
strate for the next transformation ( 1 – 3 ).
On page 1255 of this issue, Huffman et al.
( 4 ) report the development of an impres-
sive nine-enzyme biocatalytic cascade for
the synthesis of the investigational drug
islatravir for the treatment of human HIV.
This study represents a partnership be-
tween scientists from Merck and Codexis.
These two companies have a history of
successfully collaborating to develop bio-
catalysts for the synthesis of important
pharmaceuticals. Almost a decade ago,
they developed a chemoenzymatic route
for the synthesis of the type 2 diabetes
drug sitagliptin (Januvia), relying on a key
enzyme-catalyzed transamination with
a highly engineered (R)-selective trans-
aminase ( 5 ). The work was considered a
landmark example of directed evolution
and functioned to highlight the potential
application of biocatalysis to revolutionize
industrial chemical processes.
The cascade for synthesizing islatravir
was inspired by the bacterial nucleoside
salvage pathway, which recycles precious
nucleosides by using three key enzymes:
a purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP),
a phosphopentomutase (PPM), and a de-
oxyribose-5-phosphate aldolase (DERA)
(see the figure). However, to achieve the
synthesis of the target molecule, Huffman
et al. required the natural nucleoside deg-
radative cascade to run in reverse. The
reversible nature of enzymes is central to
the design of this cascade and is one of
the important features that sets biocata-
lysts apart from the majority of traditional
chemical catalysts.
The success of the cascade developed by
the team also relied on all three enzymes
accepting non-natural substrates bear-
ing a fully substituted carbon at the C-4
position of the 2-deoxyribose ring. The
authors reconstructed the reverse nucleo-
side salvage pathway from a PNP and PPM
found in Escherichia coli and a DERA from
Shewanella halifaxensis. The native E. coli
enzymes required engineering to improve
their activity. The DERA displayed existing
high activity and stereoselectivity for the
formation of the desired sugar phosphate
enantiomer, but it required engineering to
improve its ability to operate at high sub-
strate concentration.
One of the many advantages of per-
forming biocatalytic cascade reactions is
the effective displacement of unfavorable
reaction equilibria that can be achieved
through product removal. However, de-
spite performing the PNP and PPM steps
in tandem, the reaction proceeded with
poor conversion, and the inorganic phos-
phate by-product inhibits the enzymes. An
elegant solution to these issues was the in-
clusion of an auxiliary sucrose phosphory-
lase, along with its sugar substrate, which
removed free phosphate and effectively
displaced the reaction equilibrium toward
product formation.
Having assembled enzymes for the
three key steps in the cascade, Huffman et
al. sought to develop a biocatalytic route
for the synthesis of the DERA substrate
2-ethynylglyceraldehyde 3-phosphate.
Extensive screening of a broad range of
kinases resulted in the identification of
pantothenate kinase (PanK) from E. coli,
which displayed low levels of activity (~1%
conversion) toward the (R)-enantiomer of
the target aldehyde. Despite the modest
initial activity, directed evolution was suc-
cessfully used to substantially improve the
productivity and stability of this enzyme.
Finally, after 12 rounds of evolution, the
authors reversed the enantioselectivity
and improved the activity, stability, and ex-
pression of a galactose oxidase variant for
the desymmetrization of the starting sub-
strate, 2-ethynylglycerol.
Advancements in protein engineering,
BIOCATALYSIS
Biocatalytic cascades go viral
An investigational drug targeting the HIV virus
is synthesized with nine enzymes
School of Chemistry, University College Dublin, Belfield,
Dublin 4, Ireland. Email: [email protected]
GOase
Catalase
By-product
removal
Maintains metal
oxidation state
Cofactor
HRP regeneration
PanK
DERAPPMPNP
AcK
HO O 2 (air)
HO OH
Immobilized enzyme; Me, methyl
HO
HO O
HO
HO
HO
- HO
3 PO
O
O
Me OPO 3 H–
O
Me H
NH 2
NH (^2) H
2 PO 4
Sucrose
Islatravir
Reverse nucleoside
salvage pathway
By-product
removal
Fructose
Glucose 1-
phosphate
NH N O SP
N
N
N
NN
F
N
F
+
+
PPM Bacterial
DERA Bacterial
PanK Bacterial
GOase Fungal
Panthothenate kinase
Galactose oxidase
Deoxyribose-5-phosphate aldolase
Phosphopentomutase
EVOLVED ENZYME ABBREVIATION SOURCE OF ENZYME
SP Bacterial
AcK Bacterial
HRP Plant
- Mammalian
Horseradish peroxidase
Catalase
Acetate kinase
Sucrose phosphorylase
AUXILIARY ENZYME ABBREVIATION SOURCE OF ENZYME
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase PNP Bacterial
Engineering a biocatalytic cascade
The synthetic pathway for the production of the investigational drug islatravir (MK-8591) was inspired by the natural bacterial nucleoside salvage pathway. The cascade
created by Huffman et al. uses a total of nine enzymes, five of which were evolved to optimize their properties and four additional auxiliary enzymes.
6 DECEMBER 2019 • VOL 366 ISSUE 6470 1199
Published by AAAS
on December 12, 2019^
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