4.8 Article

EnzyKR: a chirality-aware deep learning model for predicting the outcomes of the hydrolase-catalyzed kinetic resolution

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 43, Pages 12073-12082

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3sc02752j

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EnzyKR is a new approach based on a deep learning framework for predicting enantiomeric outcomes in hydrolase-catalyzed kinetic resolution reactions. It automates the selection of enzyme scaffolds for separating a racemic substrate mixture and achieves good prediction performance using a structure-based encoding strategy.
Hydrolase-catalyzed kinetic resolution is a well-established biocatalytic process. However, the computational tools that predict favorable enzyme scaffolds for separating a racemic substrate mixture are underdeveloped. To address this challenge, we trained a deep learning framework, EnzyKR, to automate the selection of hydrolases for stereoselective biocatalysis. EnzyKR adopts a classifier-regressor architecture that first identifies the reactive binding conformer of a substrate-hydrolase complex, and then predicts its activation free energy. A structure-based encoding strategy was used to depict the chiral interactions between hydrolases and enantiomers. Different from existing models trained on protein sequences and substrate SMILES strings, EnzyKR was trained using 204 substrate-hydrolase complexes, which were constructed by docking. EnzyKR was tested using a held-out dataset of 20 complexes on the task of predicting activation free energy. EnzyKR achieved a Pearson correlation coefficient (R) of 0.72, a Spearman rank correlation coefficient (Spearman R) of 0.72, and a mean absolute error (MAE) of 1.54 kcal mol-1 in this task. Furthermore, EnzyKR was tested on the task of predicting enantiomeric excess ratios for 28 hydrolytic kinetic resolution reactions catalyzed by fluoroacetate dehalogenase RPA1163, halohydrin HheC, A. mediolanus epoxide hydrolase, and P. fluorescens esterase. The performance of EnzyKR was compared against that of a recently developed kinetic predictor, DLKcat. EnzyKR correctly predicts the favored enantiomer and outperforms DLKcat in 18 out of 28 reactions, occupying 64% of the test cases. These results demonstrate EnzyKR to be a new approach for prediction of enantiomeric outcomes in hydrolase-catalyzed kinetic resolution reactions. EnzyKR is designed to guide the identification of hydrolase scaffolds for resolving a racemic substrate mixture for stereoselective synthesis.

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