Biocatalytic methylation and demethylation via a shuttle catalysis concept involving corrinoid proteins

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Abstract

Synthetically established methods for methylation of phenols and demethylation of methyl phenyl ethers rely in general on hazardous reagents or/and harsh reaction conditions and are irreversible. Consequently, alternative regioselective methods for the reversible formation and breakage of C-O-ether bonds to be performed under mild and sustainable conditions are highly desired. Here we present a biocatalytic shuttle concept making use of corrinoid-dependent methyl transferases from anaerobic bacteria. The two-component enzymatic system consists of a corrinoid protein carrying the cofactor and acting as methyl group shuttle, and a methyltransferase catalyzing both methylation and demethylation in a reversible fashion. Various phenyl methyl ethers are successfully demethylated and serve in addition as sustainable methylating agents for the functionalization of various substituted catechols. Therefore, this methyl transfer approach represents a promising alternative to common chemical protocols and a valuable add-on for the toolbox of available biocatalysts.

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Farnberger, J. E., Richter, N., Hiebler, K., Bierbaumer, S., Pickl, M., Skibar, W., … Kroutil, W. (2018). Biocatalytic methylation and demethylation via a shuttle catalysis concept involving corrinoid proteins. Communications Chemistry, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-018-0083-2

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