Biocatalytic Reductive Amination- Discovery to Commercial Manufacturing applied to Abrocitinib JAK1 inhibitor

2021 
Enzymatic reductive amination, being a direct, selective and green methodology, has attracted significant interest in a short period of time and is emerging as a powerful tool for the synthesis of chiral alkylated amines. The discovery of an increasing number of imine reductases with reductive aminase (RedAm) activity has enabled mechanistic and substrate profiling studies. However, their potential for commercial applications has not been realized. Here, we report the discovery of RedAm activity in an imine reductase enzyme for the direct reductive amination of a cyclic ketone with methylamine. We also investigate engineering the enzyme to access a cis-cyclobutyl-N-methylamine for the manufacturing of a late-stage drug candidate, Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) inhibitor abrocitinib. The engineered enzyme, SpRedAm-R3-V6, showed >200-fold improvement in performance over the wild-type enzyme and was successfully used to develop a commercial manufacturing process with 73% isolated yield at 99.5% purity and high selectivity (>99:1 cis:trans). This process has been successfully used to manufacture multi-metric tons of the amine, demonstrating the potential of RedAm technology for commercial manufacturing. Reductive aminases show strong potential for the sustainable synthesis of chiral amines, but their application in industrial scale processes is lacking. Now, such an enzyme is screened and engineered allowing its use in commercial manufacturing of abrocitinib JAK1 inhibitor in multi-metric tons.
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