An Enzyme Cascade Synthesis of ε-Caprolactone and its Oligomers

Schmidt S, Scherkus C, Muschiol J, et al. An Enzyme Cascade Synthesis of ε-Caprolactone and its Oligomers. Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) . 2015;54(9):2784-2787. Poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) is chemically produced on an industrial scale in spite of the need for hazardous peracetic aci...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Angewandte Chemie International Edition
Main Authors: Schmidt, Sandy, Scherkus, Christian, Muschiol, Jan, Menyes, Ulf, Winkler, Till, Hummel, Werner, Gröger, Harald, Liese, Andreas, Herz, Hans-Georg, Bornscheuer, Uwe T.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2721884
Description
Summary:Schmidt S, Scherkus C, Muschiol J, et al. An Enzyme Cascade Synthesis of ε-Caprolactone and its Oligomers. Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) . 2015;54(9):2784-2787. Poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) is chemically produced on an industrial scale in spite of the need for hazardous peracetic acid as an oxidation reagent. Although Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMO) in principle enable the enzymatic synthesis of ε-caprolactone (ε-CL) directly from cyclohexanone with molecular oxygen, current systems suffer from low productivity and are subject to substrate and product inhibition. The major limitations for such a biocatalytic route to produce this bulk chemical were overcome by combining an alcohol dehydrogenase with a BVMO to enable the efficient oxidation of cyclohexanol to ε-CL. Key to success was a subsequent direct ring-opening oligomerization of in situ formed ε-CL in the aqueous phase by using lipase A from Candida antarctica, thus efficiently solving the product inhibition problem and leading to the formation of oligo-ε-CL at more than 20 g L(-1) when starting from 200 mM cyclohexanol. This oligomer is easily chemically polymerized to PCL.