Abstract

Previously we have demonstrated the reduction of ethyl diketoester 4 to the corresponding dihydroxy ester 6a by Acinetobacter sp. SC13874. Recently we screened more than 100 cultures for microbial reduction of both the ethyl and t-butyl diketoesters 4 and 5. Most yeast cultures showed a preference for reduction at the C-3 with low enantioselectivity. Among the three Acinetobacter strains screened, Acinetobacter sp. SC13874 reduced both compounds 4 and 5 to the corresponding (3 R)- and (5 S)-monohydroxy compounds. Monohydroxy compounds were isolated and their absolute configurations determined. (3 R)- and (5 S)-Monohydroxy compounds were reduced further to the corresponding dihydroxy esters 6a and 8a to provide alternate routes for the synthesis of compounds 14a and 16a, potential intermediates for the synthesis of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Cell suspensions of Acinetobacter sp. SC13874 reduced the ethyl diketoester 4 to a mixture of desired syn and undesired anti diastereomers. The desired syn-(3 R,5 S)-dihydroxy ester 6a was obtained with an enantiomeric excess (ee) of 99% and a diastereomeric excess (de) of 63%. Cell suspensions reduced the t-butyl diketoester 5 to a mixture of mono- and dihydroxy esters with the dihydroxy ester showing an ee of 87% and de of 51% for the desired syn-(3 R,5 S)-dihydroxy ester 8a. Three different ketoreductases were purified to homogeneity, and their biochemical properties compared. Reductase I only catalyzes the reduction of ethyl diketoester 4 to its monohydroxy products 10 and 11, whereas reductase II catalyzes the formation of dihydroxy products 6 and 7 from monohydroxy substrates 10 and 11. A third reductase (III) was identified, which catalyzes the reduction of diketoester 4 to syn-(3 R,5 S)-dihydroxy ester 6a.

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