David Ribeaucourt
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(R)-Citronellal is one of the key chiral intermediates in the synthesis of the isomer (−)-menthol, one of the most commercialised terpenoid flavours worldwide. Enzymatic approaches could represent a less energy-demanding alternative for its synthesis, such as a previously reported bienzymatic cascade starting from inexpensive, commercially available geraniol. A copper radical oxidase (CgrAlcOx) followed by a flavin-dependent ene reductase (OYE2) were used to obtain (R)-citronellal. Here, we used a metal-affinity immobilisation strategy on the His-tagged enzymes for the cascade and studied enzyme recovery and reusability as well as increased solvent tolerance. After screening a panel of resins for enzyme immobilisation and water-immiscible co-solvents, we successfully obtained 95% conversion to (R)-citronellal with 96.9% enantiomeric excess (ee) in a concurrent cascade after 7 h of reaction time, starting from 10 mM of geraniol.
Biocatalytic pathways for the synthesis of (-)-menthol, the most sold flavor worldwide, are highly sought-after. To access the key intermediate (R)-citronellal used in current major industrial production routes, we established a one-pot bienzymatic cascade from inexpensive geraniol, overcoming the problematic biocatalytic reduction of the mixture of (E/Z)-isomers in citral by harnessing a copper radical oxidase (CgrAlcOx) and an old yellow enzyme (OYE). The cascade using OYE2 delivered 95.1% conversion to (R)-citronellal with 95.9% ee, a 62 mg scale-up affording high yield and similar optical purity. An alternative OYE, GluER, gave (S)-citronellal from geraniol with 95.3% conversion and 99.2% ee.