SBIR-STTR Award

Novel Method to Produce Beta-Amino Acids
Award last edited on: 10/16/07

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIGMS
Total Award Amount
$923,600
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Dunming Zhu

Company Information

Biocatalytics Inc

129 North Hill Avenue Suite 103
Pasadena, CA 91106
   (626) 585-9797
   N/A
   www.biocatalytics.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 27
County: Los Angeles

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43GM064887-01
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase I year
2002
Phase I Amount
$100,000
beta-Amino acids are rapidly growing in importance as a key class of pharmaceutical intermediates, with applications in a number of current and future drugs. This Phase 1 proposal seeks to establish the feasibility of a novel and broadly applicable method for the production of chiral beta-amino acids. In the first step, the chemical synthesis of a series of substituted 5,6-dihydrouracils from inexpensive and readily available starting materials will be demonstrated and optimized. In the second step, the substituted 5,6-dihydrouracil precursors will be converted in a single step to beta-amino acids by the action of two enzymes working in concert: a dihydrouracilase, which will cleave the dihydrouracil ring hydrolytically to produce an N-carbamoyl beta-amino acid, followed by a carbamoylase, which will produce the desired beta-amino acid. BioCatalytics currently has four dihydrouracilase enzymes for testing in the proposed method. The gene encoding the carbamoylase will be cloned into E. coli and produced in the course of the project. The efficacy of the method will be demonstrated by producing gram quantities of four current commercial target beta-amino acids.

Thesaurus Terms:
aminoacid, carboxyltransferase /carbamoyltransferase, catalyst, chemical synthesis, enzyme mechanism, method development peptide chemical synthesis, uracil analog Escherichia coli, molecular cloning

Phase II

Contract Number: 2R44GM064887-02A1
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
2005
(last award dollars: 2006)
Phase II Amount
$823,600

Amino acids are rapidly growing in importance as a key class of pharmaceutical intermediates, with applications in a number of current and future drugs. A cost-effective process for the production of optically pure (-amino acids will be developed in this project to accommodate the commercial needs for (-amino acids. The method involves two enzymatic reactions starting from conveniently prepared racemic substituted dihydrouracils. The 5,6-dihydrouracil, which may be substituted at either the 5 or 6 positions with various functional groups, is contacted with a dihydrouracilase enzyme to catalyze a stereoselective hydrolysis reaction, producing an enantiomerically-enriched chiral N-carbamoyl-(-amino acid and an enantiomerically enriched, unreacted chiral 5,6-dihydrouracil. The chiral N-carbamoyl-(-amino acid was then decarbamoylated enzymatically to produce an optically pure (-amino acid. The opposite enantiomer of the (-amino acid can be produced in pure form by recovering and hydrolyzing the unreacted chiral 5,6- dihydrouracil using the enzymes with opposite stereoselectivity. An important feature of this method is that the two enzyme reaction can be carried out in one pot and it is not necessary to isolate the intermediate N-carbamoyl-(-amino acids. This proof of concept has been demonstrated in Phase 1 using 5,6-dihydrouracil and 5-methyl-5,6-dihydrouracil. In Phase II, the top priority will be searching for carbamoylase enzymes with a broader substrate range, particularly including aryl-substituted N-carbamoyl-(-amino acids using directed evolution technology. Dihydrouracilases with opposite enantioselectivity (i.e. enantioselectively hydrolyzing the R-enantiomer of dihydrouracils) will also be found and produced. The cost-effective one-pot process to convert racemic substituted dihydrouracils to the corresponding enantiomerically pure (-amino acids via the coupled dihydrouracilase/carbamoylase two-enzyme system in the non-immobilized and immobilized forms will be developed further using the enzymes acquired in Phase 2. Finally, the production of enantiomerically-pure (-amino acids will be demonstrated on the 100 gram scale for important commercial targets