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A new way to create rare sugars

MIT team discovers an inorganic catalyst that could pave the way to a more robust synthesis of valuable rare sugars.
Paper authors (l-r) Yuran Wang, William Gunther and Yuriy Roman show a sample of the inorganic catalyst Sn-Beta zeolites with borate salts
Caption:
Paper authors (l-r) Yuran Wang, William Gunther and Yuriy Roman show a sample of the inorganic catalyst Sn-Beta zeolites with borate salts
Credits:
Photo: Melanie Miller
A comparison of epimerization with sodium tetraborate and isomerization without.
Caption:
A comparison of epimerization with sodium tetraborate and isomerization without.
Credits:
Image courtesy of the Roman Lab
The process of epimerization with Sn-Beta zeolites with borate salts.
Caption:
The process of epimerization with Sn-Beta zeolites with borate salts.
Credits:
Image courtesy of the Roman Lab

Despite their low natural abundance, rare sugars have enormous potential in several important applications, including their use as components for antiviral drugs, low-calorie sweeteners with low glycemic indexes, anti-inflammatory agents with immunosuppressive properties and chiral building blocks in natural products synthesis. In order to meet today’s high demand for the sugars, scientists currently use costly and complex biochemical processes to transform easily found abundant sugars into these rare ones.

These biochemical processes use three main classes of enzymes, two of which — isomerases and oxidoreductases — are popular because they are active on a wide range of simple substrates; however such general activity is not always an advantage because it can result in the formation of side products (for example xylose isomerase converts glucose into fructose and simultaneously converts fructose into mannose). These processes have generated some commercially available rare sugars, but the complex nature of that biochemical process makes it very costly. The third class of enzymes, epimerases, are potentially the most useful biocatalysts for the widespread production of rare sugars because they offer high specificity for products and are capable of selectively modifying sugars at multiple carbon positions. But like all biological catalysts, epimerases can be fragile because they require very specific reaction conditions and can only act on previously functionalized sugars.

In a paper published this week in Nature Communications, an MIT team has found a way to use inorganic catalysts in place of the enzymes to generate sugar epimers in a simple and robust manner. The catalytic system involves using a tin-substituted microporous silicate (Sn-Beta zeolite) combined with a borate salt. "This work is exciting because the zeolite/borate combination generates sugar epimers with yields similar to those typically observed with biological catalysts,” explains Professor Yuriy Román, Texaco-Mangelsdorf Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, “Inorganic materials can rarely perform as well as their biological counterparts in the selective conversion of sugars."

MIT graduate student and lead author William R. Gunther said, "Our system opens up exciting opportunities for the production of rare sugars using inorganic catalysts, such as L-ribose, which can be used in anti-viral and anti-cancer agents.”

Román and his team found that Sn-Beta zeolite in the presence of sodium tetraborate is shown to catalyze the selective epimerization of aldoses in aqueous media. The reaction proceeds by way of a rather unusual 1,2 carbon-shift mechanism, wherein C-C bonds move within the molecule’s backbone.

Looking toward the future, Roman’s group is excited to investigate in more detail the unusual carbon-shift mechanism, which may be applied to other classes of biomass-derived oxygenated molecules and to more general reactions, such as those currently associated with C–C bond-forming events in prebiotic chemistry that could have led to the origins of life.
Authors on this paper include Yuran Wang, Yuewei Ji, Vladimir K. Michaelis, Sean T. Hunt and Robert G. Griffin. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation.

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