Estudo da redução de acetofenonas utilizando biocatalizadores da região amazônica para obtenção de substâncias com elevada pureza enantiomérica de interesse farmacológico
Carregando...
Arquivos
Data
Autores
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
Resumo
The search for new biocatalysts is of great interest to the biotechnology and pharmaceutical
industries. Enzymes are substances found in plants and in microorganisms, and present
themselves as excellent catalysts due to their ability to synthesize chemical substances that
are biologically active. Some of these compounds are widespread in drug production, such as
enantiomerically pure alcohols. Its synthesis can be carried out using whole cells of vegetables
or microorganisms in the asymmetric bioreduction reactions of ketones. Considering the vast
biodiversity present in the Amazon region and the need for research in this area, this work
aimed to bioprospect new biocatalysts, in order to evaluate its potential on the enantioselective
bioreduction reactions of acetophenones. The vegetables Daucus carota (carrot), Zingiber
officinale (ginger), Manihot esculenta (cassava), Ipomoea potatoes (sweet potato), Solanum
melongena (eggplant), and different parts of Amazon plants Cissus gongylodes (Cipó kupá),
Solanum sessiliflorum (cubiu) and Xanthosoma violaceum were tested. Different fungi strains
of the genus Aspergillus were also tested. The fungi were evaluated regarding its production
of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), enzyme envolved in the bioreduction reactions. The reactios
of p-aminoacetophenone, p-hydroxyacetophenone, p-nitroacetophenone and p-methoxy-mnitroacetophenone
were evaluated in three reaction systems: organic (hexane), biphasic
(hexane and buffer), and aqueous (buffer). The fungi were cultivated for a period of five days,
then were filtered and set to dry. For the vegetables, an assepsia step was performed and then
they were cut into small pieces. Thereafter, 50 mg of the dried mycelia or 10 g of the sliced
vegetables were added to the reaction medium (40 mL) containing the previously solubilized
carbonyl substrates. After 24 hours, the reaction was analyzed by gas chromatography
equipped with a chiral column. All tested fungi produced ADH, and 5 strains were selected for
the biocatalytic reactions. Fungus A. brasiliensis presented the best convertion percentages
for the reduction of p-nitroacetophenone (c = 53.7%), and p-methoxy-m-nitroacetophenone (c
= 32.2%), both in a biphasic system. In organic medium, the strain was able to reduce the paminoacetophenone
(c = 11%). All these reactions presented enantiomeric excess > 99%.
Among the tested vegetables, the reduction of p-aminoacetophenone mediated by the tuber
of purple taioba presented an outstanding result (c = 93.6%) of only one chiral alcohol, in
organic medium. For the reduction of p-hydroxyacetophenone, the carrot was the best
biocatalyst, forming only one enantiomer, with 45.5% conversion in biphasic medium. For pnitroacetophenone,
the cipó-kupá promoted the formation of only one product with 13.9%
conversion in the two-phase medium. For p-methoxy-m-nitroacetophenone, cassava and
purple taioba tuber provided 34.6% conversion to the chiral alcohol in aqueous medium. To
evaluate the influence of reaction time, substrate concentration and pH over the conversion
values, it was performed an experimental design for some of the biocatalytic systems. For A.
brasiliensis, time and pH were the variables that significantly influenced chiral alcohol
production (p > 0.5), with the shortest time and the highest pH leading to the highest conversion
rates. For the tests performed with the vegetables, sweet potato was directly influenced by pH
during the reduction reaction of p-nitroacetophenone (p > 00.5). In this work were obtained
results that demonstrate the biocatalytic potential of fungi of the genus Aspergillus and of
several plants found in the Amazon region, especially purple taioba. It is expected that
researchs on this area can be carried out to explore the biotechnological potential of these
organisms with an emphasis on biocatalysis.
Key words: Biocatalysis, Aspergillus, Vegetables, Biorreduction, Enantioselectivity.