Co-Catalyst Enabled Biotransformation of Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids for Biobased Monomers
Résumé
Enzymatic lipid epoxidation offers a promising approach to obtain renewable intermediates for biomaterials, but regiochemical control of these reactions has remained elusive. Here we report the discovery and application of artificial cocatalysts to direct the regioselectivity of catalytic epoxidation with the lipase CpLIP2. The methyl esters of alkyl diacids show the unique ability to direct regioselective epoxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids, major components of plant and algae-based oils. We apply this transformation to the conversion of linoleic acid into sebacic acid, a dicarboxylic acid precursor valuable for biobased polyester polyurethanes, through a six-step pathway involving a regioselective Meinwald rearrangement. To highlight the route’s significance, sebacic acid was used to prepare a 100% biobased thermoplastic polyurethane, illustrating the relevance of this pathway to industrial applications. This regioselective chemoenzymatic oxidation and rearrangement process can be used to access multiple dicarboxylic acids that have remained previously unexplored as biobased monomers.
