Abstract

Engineered heme proteins exhibit excellent sustainable catalytic carbene transfer reactivities toward olefins for value-added cyclopropanes. However, unactivated and electron-deficient olefins remain challenging in such reactions. To help design efficient heme-inspired biocatalysts for these difficult situations, a systematic quantum chemical mechanistic study was performed to investigate effects of olefin substituents, non-native amino acid axial ligands, and natural and non-natural macrocycles with the widely used ethyl diazoacetate. Results show that electron-deficient substrate ethyl acrylate has a much higher barrier than the electron-rich styrene. For styrene, the predicted barrier trend is consistent with experimentally used heme analogue cofactors, which can significantly reduce barriers. For ethyl acrylate, while the best non-native axial ligand only marginally improves the reactivity versus the native histidine model, a couple of computationally studied macrocycles can dramatically reduce barriers to the level comparable to styrene. These results will facilitate the development of better biocatalysts in this area.

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