Cis-aminoindanol, a key chiral precursor to the HIV protease inhibitor CRIXIVAN, can be derived from indene oxidation products
of (2R) stereochemistry. A number of different microorganisms, notably strains of the genera
Pseudomonas and
Rhodococcus, have been isolated that catalyze the oxygenation of indene to indandiol with greater stereospecificity than is achievable
through traditional chemical synthesis. The yield and ultimate optical purity of indandiol produced in such biocatalytic processes
is influenced by the intrinsic stereospecificity of the oxygenase(s), enantioselective dehydrogenation, and the loss of substrate
to alternate, undesirable metabolites. Metabolic engineering of any indene bioconversion system for the commercial-scale production
of cis-aminoindanol must account for these influences, as well as pathway fluxes and enzyme regulation, to optimize the formation
of oxygenated precursors with useful stereochemistry. As such, the process by which bacterial systems carry out the bioconversion
of indene to indandiol serves as a model for biological production of industrially relevant chiral synthons.
Electronic Publication