Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1992220 The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Aspergillus tamarii contains an endogenous lactonization pathway which can transform progesterone to testololactone in high yield through a sequential four step enzymatic pathway. In this pathway testosterone is formed which primarily undergoes oxidation of the C-17β-alcohol to a C-17 ketone but, can also enter a minor hydroxylation pathway where 11β-hydroxytestosterone is produced. It was recently demonstrated that this hydroxylase could monohydroxylate 3β-hydroxy substituted saturated steroidal lactones in all four possible binding orientations (normal, reverse, inverted normal, inverted reverse) on rings B and C of the steroid nucleus. It was therefore of interest to determine the fate of a series of 3α-substituted steroidal analogues to determine stereochemical effect on transformation. Hydroxylation on the central rings was found to be restricted to the 11β-position (normal binding), indicating that the 3α-stereochemistry removes freedom of binding orientation within the hydroxylase. The only other hydroxylation observed was at the 1β-position. Interestingly the presence of this functional group did not prevent lactonization of the C-17 ketone. In contrast the presence of the 11β-hydroxyl completely inhibited Baeyer–Villiger oxidation, a result which again demonstrates that single functional groups can exert significant control over metabolic handling of steroids in this organism. This may also explain why lactonization of 11β-hydroxytestosterone does not occur. Lactonization of the C-17 ketone was not significantly affected by the 3α-alcohol with significant yields achieved (53%). Interestingly a time course experiment demonstrated that the presence of the 3α-acetate inhibited the Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenase with its activity being observed 24 h later than non-acetate containing analogues. Apart from oxidative transformations observed a minor reductive pathway was revealed with the C-17 ketone being reduced to a C-17β-alcohol for the first time in this organism.

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