Lo H C, Leiva C, Buriez O, Kerr J B, Olmstead M M, Fish R H
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 70-108B, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Inorg Chem. 2001 Dec 17;40(26):6705-16. doi: 10.1021/ic010562z.
Cofactor regeneration; i.e., regiospecific conversion of NAD(+) to 1,4-NADH, has been extensively studied and is a crucial component in the eventual use of 1,4-NADH in a variety of bioorganic synthesis processes involving the formation of chiral organic compounds. We have studied the reduction of a model NAD(+) compound, 1-benzylnicotinamide triflate, 1a, using CpRh(bpy)(H(2)O), 2 (Cp = eta(5)-C(5)Me(5), bpy = 2,2'-bipyridyl), as the catalyst precursor and sodium formate (HCO(2)Na) as the hydride source in 1:1 H(2)O/THF and have found exclusive 1-benzyl-1,4-dihydronicotinamide regioselectivity, as was observed previously for natural NAD(+) that provided 1,4-NADH (see: Steckhan et al. Organometallics 1991, 10, 1568). Moreover, a variety of 3-substituted derivatives of 1-benzylpyridinium triflate, in addition to the -C(O)NH(2) group (1a), were also studied to ascertain that this 3-functionality (e.g., -C(O)NHCH(3), -C(S)NH(2), -C(O)CH(3), -C(O)OCH(3), and -CN, 1b,d-g) coordinates to a CpRh(bpy)H complex to direct the concerted, regioselective transfer of the hydride group from the rhodium to the 4-ring position of the NAD(+) model; all coordinating 3-substituents had relative rates in the 0.9-1.3 range with substrate 1a set to 1.0. If in fact the 3-substituent presented a steric effect [-C(O)NH(CH(2)CH(3))(2), 1c] or was a nonbinding group (-CH(3), 1h; -H, 1i), no catalytic hydride transfer was observed even with the more electrophilic 2 and 6 ring positions being readily available, which further implicated the crucial coordination of the NAD(+) model to the CpRh metal ion center. We also found that the 1-benzyl substituent on the nitrogen atom exerted a substantial electron-withdrawing effect, in comparison to the electron-donating 1-methyl substituent, and favorably affected the rate of the regioselective reduction (rate enhancement of 1-benzyl/1-methyl = 2.0). The kinetics of the regioselective reduction of 1a were studied to show that the initial rate of reduction, r(i), is affected by the concentrations of the substrate, 1a, precatalyst, 2, and the hydride source, HCO(2)Na, in 1:1 H(2)O/THF: d[1-benzyl-1,4-dihydronicotnamide]/dt = k(cat)[1a][2][HCO(2)Na]. Furthermore, we wish to demonstrate that a previously synthesized aqueous NAD(+) model, beta-nicotinamide ribose-5'-methyl phosphate, 3, shows a similar regioselectivity for the 1,4-NADH analogue, while the initial rate (r(i)) for the regioselective reduction of 3 and NAD(+) itself was found to be comparable in water but faster by a factor of approximately 3 in comparison to 1a in 1:1 H(2)O/THF; the solvent, THF, appeared to inhibit the rate of reduction in 1a by presumably competing with the substrate 1a for the CpRh metal ion center. However, in H(2)O, the initial kinetic rate for substrate 3 was not affected by its concentration and implies that, in H(2)O, CpRh(bpy)H formation is rate determining. We assume that binding of 3 and NAD(+) to the CpRh metal ion center is also a pertinent step for 1,4-dihydro product formation, the experimental rate expression in H(2)O being d[1,4-dihydro-beta-nicotinamide ribose-5'-methyl phosphate]/dt = k(cat)[2][HCO(2)Na]. What we have discovered, for the first time, is evidence that the regioselective reduction of NAD(+) to 1,4-NADH by CpRh(bpy)H is a consequence of the amide's ability to coordinate to the CpRh metal center, thereby constricting the kinetically favorable six-membered ring transition state for plausible concerted hydride transfer/insertion to C4 to regioselectively provide the 1,4-NADH derivative; CpRh(bpy)H can be categorized as a biomimetic enzymatic hydride via its ability to bind and regioselectively transfer hydride to C4, exclusively. Clearly, the pyrophosphate and adenosine groups associated with the structure of NAD(+) are not essential in the rate of hydride transfer to C4, with NAD(+) model 3 having a similar initial rate (r(i)) of reduction as NAD(+) itself in water. Finally, a catalytic cycle will be proposed to account for our overall observations.
辅因子再生,即NAD(+)区域特异性转化为1,4-NADH,已得到广泛研究,并且是1,4-NADH最终用于各种涉及手性有机化合物形成的生物有机合成过程中的关键组成部分。我们研究了使用[CpRh(bpy)(H₂O)]²⁺(2,Cp = η⁵-C₅Me₅,bpy = 2,2'-联吡啶)作为催化剂前体,以及甲酸钠(HCO₂Na)作为氢化物源,在1:1 H₂O/THF中对模型NAD(+)化合物1-苄基三氟甲磺酸烟酰胺(1a)的还原反应,发现了与之前天然NAD(+)提供1,4-NADH时观察到的情况相同的专一性1-苄基-1,4-二氢烟酰胺区域选择性(见:Steckhan等人,《有机金属化学》,1991年,第10卷,第1568页)。此外,除了-C(O)NH₂基团(1a)外,还研究了多种1-苄基吡啶三氟甲磺酸盐的3-取代衍生物,以确定该3-官能团(例如-C(O)NHCH₃、-C(S)NH₂、-C(O)CH₃、-C(O)OCH₃和-CN,1b、d - g)与[CpRh(bpy)H]⁺络合物配位,从而引导氢化物基团从铑到NAD(+)模型的4-环位置进行协同、区域选择性转移;所有配位的3-取代基的相对速率在0.9 - 1.3范围内,以底物1a的速率设为1.0。实际上,如果3-取代基呈现空间效应[-C(O)NH(CH₂CH₃)₂,1c]或为非结合基团(-CH₃,1h;-H,1i),即使2-和6-环位置更具亲电性且易于反应,也未观察到催化氢化物转移,这进一步表明NAD(+)模型与CpRh金属离子中心的关键配位作用。我们还发现,与供电子的1-甲基取代基相比,氮原子上的1-苄基取代基具有显著的吸电子效应,并对区域选择性还原速率产生有利影响(1-苄基/1-甲基的速率增强为2.0)。研究了1a区域选择性还原的动力学,结果表明在1:1 H₂O/THF中,还原的初始速率r(i)受底物1a、前催化剂2和氢化物源HCO₂Na浓度的影响:d[1-苄基-1,4-二氢烟酰胺]/dt = k(cat)[1a][2][HCO₂Na]。此外,我们希望证明,之前合成的水性NAD(+)模型β-烟酰胺核糖-5'-甲基磷酸酯(3)对1,4-NADH类似物表现出类似的区域选择性,而3和NAD(+)本身区域选择性还原的初始速率(r(i))在水中相当,但与1:1 H₂O/THF中的1a相比快约3倍;溶剂THF似乎通过与底物1a竞争CpRh金属离子中心而抑制了1a的还原速率。然而,在H₂O中,底物3的初始动力学速率不受其浓度影响,这意味着在H₂O中,[CpRh(bpy)H]⁺的形成是速率决定步骤。我们假设3和NAD(+)与CpRh金属离子中心的结合也是形成1,4-二氢产物的相关步骤,在H₂O中的实验速率表达式为d[1,4-二氢-β-烟酰胺核糖-5'-甲基磷酸酯]/dt = k(cat)[2][HCO₂Na]。我们首次发现的证据表明,[CpRh(bpy)H]⁺将NAD(+)区域选择性还原为1,4-NADH是由于酰胺与CpRh金属中心配位的能力,从而限制了动力学上有利的六元环过渡态,以便进行合理的协同氢化物转移/插入到C4,从而区域选择性地提供1,4-NADH衍生物;[CpRh(bpy)H]⁺可通过其结合并仅将氢化物区域选择性转移到C4的能力被归类为仿生酶促氢化物。显然,与NAD(+)结构相关的焦磷酸和腺苷基团在氢化物转移到C4的速率中并非必需,NAD(+)模型3在水中具有与NAD(+)本身相似的初始还原速率(r(i))。最后,将提出一个催化循环来解释我们的总体观察结果。