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1.
2.
The addition of a very small concentration of a detergent (in many instances under the critical micellar concentration (cmc)) has been found to greatly increase the activity of immobilized lipases, using those from Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) and Candida antarctica (isoform B) as model enzymes. However, the detergents may also have a negative effect on enzyme activity; in fact, for all enzyme preparations and substrates the activity/detergent concentration curve reached a maximum value and started to decrease, in many instances even under the initial value. The concentration and nature of the detergent (SDS, CTAB, Triton X-100, or X-45) that permitted the maximum hyperactivation was different depending on the substrate. The best hyperactivation values promoted by the presence of detergent were over a 20-fold factor. The presence of detergents permitted the inhibition of lipases by irreversible covalent inhibitors (e.g., 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride) (AEBSF) while the enzyme, in the absence of detergent, is not inhibited by these irreversible inhibitors. This suggested that the main effect of the detergents is to shift the conformational equilibrium of lipases toward the open form. Moreover, the presence of detergents also permitted to improve the enantioselectivity exhibited by the immobilized lipases in some cases. For example, the enantioselectivity of PFL-glyoxyl agarose increased from 40 to more than 100 in the hydrolysis of (+/-)-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutyric acid ethyl ester by using 0.1% CTAB.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrophobins are fungal proteins that self-assemble spontaneously at hydrophilic-hydrophobic interfaces and change the polar nature of the surfaces to which they attach. This attribute can be used to introduce hydrophobic foci on the surface of hydrophilic supports where hydrophobins are attached by covalent binding. In this paper, we report the binding of Pleurotus ostreatus hydrophobins to a hydrophilic matrix (agarose) to construct a support for noncovalent immobilization and activation of lipases from Candida antarctica, Humicola lanuginosa, and Pseudomonas flourescens. Lipase immobilization on agarose-bound hydrophobins proceeded at very low ionic strength and resulted in increased lipase activity and stability. The enzyme could be desorbed from the support using moderate concentrations of Triton X-100, and its enantioselectivity was similar to that of lipases interfacially immobilized on conventional hydrophobic supports. These results suggest that lipase adsorption on hydrophobins follows an "interfacial activation" mechanism; immobilization on hydrophobins offers new possibilities for lipase study and modulation and reveals a new application for fungal hydrophobins.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption of various enzymes (proteases, lipases and peroxidases) onto the surface of talc (a hydrophobic support) and non- talc materials was investigated. In general, adsorption was favored by the hydrophobicity of the support. We found little evidence for the ionic interactions that characterize adsorption onto mineral supports (clays, porous glasses). Modification of the hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance of the talc support produced new immobilized biocatalysts with high enzyme activity (both lipases and horseradish peroxidase). This represents the first example of this type of talc-protein interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Lipase QL from Alcaligenes sp. is a quite thermostable enzyme. For example, it retains 75% of catalytic activity after incubation for 100 h at 55 °C and pH 7.0. Nevertheless, an improvement of the enzyme properties was intended via immobilization by covalent attachment to different activated supports and by adsorption on hydrophobic supports (octadecyl-sepabeads). This latter immobilization technique promotes the most interesting improvement of enzyme properties: (a) the enzyme is hyperactivated after immobilization: the immobilized preparation exhibits a 135% of catalytic activity for the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl propionate as compared to the soluble enzyme; (b) the thermal stability of the immobilized enzyme is highly improved: the immobilized preparation exhibits a half-life time of 12 h when incubated at 80 °C, pH 8.5 (a 25-fold stabilizing factor regarding to the soluble enzyme); (c) the optimal temperature was increased from 50 °C (soluble enzyme) up to 70 °C (hydrophobic support enzyme immobilized preparations); (d) the enantioselectivity of the enzyme for the hydrolysis of glycidyl butyrate and its dependence on the experimental conditions was significantly altered. Moreover, because the enzyme becomes reversibly but very strongly adsorbed on these highly hydrophobic supports, the lipase may be desorbed after its inactivation and the support may be reused. Very likely, adsorption occurs via interfacial activation of the lipase on the hydrophobic supports at very low ionic strength. On the other hand, all the covalent immobilization protocols used to immobilize the enzyme hardly improved the properties of the lipase.  相似文献   

6.
Glutaraldehyde chemistry has been used to immobilize lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) under different situations. Using high ionic strength, ionic adsorption is avoided, but CALB is adsorbed on the support via interfacial activation. Using non-ionic detergents (e.g., Triton X-100), the enzyme becomes ionically adsorbed on the activated support. If detergent and salt are simultaneously present during immobilization, a covalent attachment to the support is first produced. In absence of detergent or high ionic strength, a mixture of all of the previous immobilization reasons should coexist. Thus, 5 different CALB biocatalysts were prepared following the previous described protocols, and its stability and activity, pH/activity profile and specificity versus R and S methyl mandelate were analyzed. The existence of covalent attachment of more than 95% of the enzyme molecules was confirmed by washing the biocatalysts in salt and detergent solutions. The glutaraldehyde treatment of the enzyme adsorbed on aminated supports did not produce a significant improvement on the activity of the enzyme versus p-nitrophenylpropinate (pNPB) nor a high stabilization of the enzyme. This differed from the effects of a similar treatment of CAL adsorbed on octyl agarose. However, they were similar to the effects of this treatment on covalently immobilized CALB, suggesting that the immobilization protocol may greatly affect the final effect of a chemical modification on the enzyme properties.Dramatic changes in the enzyme features were observed comparing the different preparations, mainly in the specificity of CALB versus p-NPB and R-methyl mandelate (from 2.5 to 20), or in the enantiospecificity versus R/S methyl mandelate (from 1.8 to 16), confirming that these different immobilization protocols produced biocatalysts with different features. Moreover, changes in experimental conditions produced very different effects on the properties of the different CALB preparations.  相似文献   

7.
A partially purified lipase produced by the thermophile Geobacillus thermoleovorans CCR11 was immobilized by adsorption on porous polypropylene (Accurel EP-100) in the presence and absence of 0.1% Triton X-100. Lipase production was induced in a 2.5% high oleic safflower oil medium and the enzyme was partially purified by diafiltration (co. 500,000 Da). Immobilization conditions were established at 25 °C, pH 6, and a protein concentration of 0.9 mg/mL in the presence and absence of 0.1% Triton X-100. Immobilization increased enzyme thermostability but there was no change in neither the optimum pH nor in pH resistance irrelevant to the presence of the detergent during immobilization. Immobilization with or without Triton X-100 allowed the reuse of the lipase preparation for 11 and 8 cycles, respectively. There was a significant difference between residual activity of immobilized and soluble enzyme after 36 days of storage at 4 °C (P < 0.05). With respect to chain length specificity, the immobilized lipase showed less activity over short chain esters than the soluble lipase. The immobilized lipase showed good resistance to desorption with phosphate buffer and NaCl; minor loses with detergents were observed (less than 50% with Triton X-100 and Tween-80), but activity was completely lost with SDS. Immobilization of G. thermoleovorans CCR11 lipase in porous polypropylene is a simple and easy method to obtain a biocatalyst with increased stability, improved performance, with the possibility for re-use, and therefore an interesting potential use in commercial conditions.  相似文献   

8.
A lipase from Bacillus thermocatenulatus (BTL2) cloned in E. coli has been purified using a very simple method: interfacial activation on a hydrophobic support followed by desorption with Triton. Only one band was detected by SDS-PAGE. The pure enzyme was immobilized using different methodologies. BTL2 adsorbed on a hydrophobic support (octadecyl-Sepabeads) exhibited a hyperactivation with respect to the soluble enzyme, whereas the other immobilized preparations suffered a slight decrease in the expressed activity. The soluble enzyme was very stable, but all immobilized preparations were much more stable than the soluble enzyme, the octadecyl-Sepabeads-BTL2 preparation being the most stable one in all conditions (high temperature or in the presence of organic cosolvents), maintaining 100% of the activity at 65 degrees C or 30% of dioxane and 45 degrees C after several days of incubation. The glyoxyl preparation, the second more stable, retained 80% of the initial activity after 2 days, respectively. The adsorption of this thermophilic lipase on octadecyl-Sepabeads permitted an increase in the optimal temperature of the enzyme of 10 degrees C.  相似文献   

9.
Microbial lipases are widely diversified in their enzymatic properties and substrate specificities, which make them very attractive for industrial application. Partially purified lipase from Bjerkandera adusta R59 was immobilized on controlled porous glass (CPG) and its properties were compared with those of the free enzyme. The free and immobilized lipases showed optimal activities at 45 and 50°C, respectively. Both enzyme forms were highly thermostable up to 60°C. The enzymes were stable at pH from 6.0 to 9.0 and their optimal pH for activity was 7.0. The free lipase was more thermostable in n-hexane than in aqueous environment. Both lipase preparations had good stabilities in non-polar solvents and were capable of hydrolysing a variety of synthetic and natural fats. Non-immobilized lipase activity was inhibited by disulphide bond reagents, serine and thiol inhibitors, while EDTA and eserine had no effect on enzyme activity. All anionic detergents tested in experiments inhibited lipase activity. The free lipase showed good stability in the presence of commercial detergents at laundry pH and temperatures. Applications of free and immobilized lipases for esterification were also presented.  相似文献   

10.
New and strong ionic exchange resins have been prepared by the simple and rapid ionic adsorption of anionic polymers (sulfate-dextran) on porous supports activated with the opposite ionic group (DEAE/MANAE). Ionic exchange properties of such composites were strongly dependent on the size of the ionic polymers as well as on the conditions of the ionic coating of the solids with the ionic polymers (optimal conditions were 400 mg of sulfate-dextran 5000 kDa per gram of support). Around 80% of the proteins contained in crude extracts from Escherichia coli and Acetobacter turbidans could be adsorbed on these porous composites even at pH 7. This interaction was stronger than that using conventional carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) and even others such as supports coated with aspartic-dextran polymer. By means of the sequential use of the new supports and supports coated with polyethyleneimine (PEI), all proteins from crude extracts could be immobilized. In fact, a large percentage (over 50%) could be immobilized on both supports. Finally, some industrially relevant enzymes (beta-galactosidases from Aspergillus oryzae, Kluyveromyces lactis, and Thermussp. strain T2, lipases from Candida antarctica A and B, Candida rugosa, Rhizomucor miehei, and Rhyzopus oryzae and bovine pancreas trypsin and chymotrypsin) have been immobilized on these supports with very high activity recoveries and immobilization rates. After enzyme inactivation, the protein could be fully desorbed from the support, and then the support could be reused for several cycles. Moreover, in some instances the enzyme stability was significantly improved, mainly in the presence of organic solvents, perhaps as a consequence of the highly hydrophilic microenvironment of the support.  相似文献   

11.
《Process Biochemistry》2014,49(9):1511-1515
Lecitase Ultra has been covalently immobilized on cyanogen bromide cross-linked 4% agarose (CNBr) beads, maintaining 70% of the initial activity. The activity of the immobilized enzyme was improved in the presence of Triton X-100, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) (e.g., up to 800% when using CTAB). However, CTAB and Triton X-100 presented a negative effect on enzyme stability even at low concentrations, and SDS cannot be used for a long time at 1% concentration. To maintain the hyperactivated conformation of the enzyme in the absence of detergent, ionic polymers were added during incubation of the immobilized enzyme in the presence of detergents. Coating the immobilized enzyme with polyethylenimine in aqueous buffer (PEI) produced a 3-fold increase in enzyme activity. However, in the presence of 0.1% SDS (v/v), this coating produced a 50-fold increase in enzyme activity. Using PEI and 0.01% (v/v) CTAB, the Lecitase activity decreased to 10%. Using irreversible inhibitors, it could be shown that the PEI/SDS-CNBr-Lecitase preparation allowed its catalytic Ser to be more accessible to the reaction medium than the unmodified CNBr-Lecitase.  相似文献   

12.
NAD+ glycohydrolase, an amphipathic membrane-bound enzyme, solubilized from calf spleen microsomes with detergents and purified, was immobilized by hydrophobic interactions on octyl-Sepharose. Conditions are described for optimal adsorption on the gel. The immobilized enzyme remained catalytically active (hydrolase and transglycosidase activities) and could be used to prepare nicotinic acid analogs of NAD(P)+.  相似文献   

13.
Immobilization of lipases involves many levels of complications relating to the structure of the active site and its interactions with the immobilization support. Interaction of the so called hydrophobic ‘lid’ with the support has been reported to affect synthetic activity of an immobilized lipase. In this work we evaluate and compare the synthetic activity of lipases from different sources immobilized on different kinds of supports with varying hydrophobicity. Humicola lanuginosa lipase, Candida antarctica lipase B and Rhizomucor miehei lipase were physically adsorbed onto two types of hydrophobic carriers, namely hydrophilic carriers with conjugated hydrophobic ligands, and supports with base matrix hydrophobicity. The prepared immobilized enzymes were used for acylation of n-butanol with oleic acid as acyl donor in iso-octane with variable water content (0–2.8%, v/v) as reaction medium. Enzyme activity and effect of water on the activity of the immobilized derivatives were compared with those of respective soluble lipases and a commercial immobilized lipase Novozyme 435. Both R. miehei and H. lanuginosa immobilized lipases showed maximum activity at 1.39% (v/v) added water concentration. Sepabeads, a methacrylate based hydrophilic support with conjugated octadecyl chain showed highest immobilized esterification (synthetic) activity for all three enzymes, and of the three R. miehei lipase displayed maximum esterification activity comparable to the commercial enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
1. Human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase was solubilized by Triton X-100 and purified by affinity chromatography to a specific activity of 3800 IU/mg of protein. The yield of the purified enzyme was 25--45%. 2. Gel filtration on Sepharose 4-B in the presence of Triton X-100 revealed one peak of enzyme activity with a Stokes' radius of 8.7 nm. Density gradient centrifugation in 0.1% Triton X-100 showed one peak of enzyme activity with an S4 value of 6.3S. 3. Isoelectric focusing in Triton X-100 resolved the enzyme into five molecular forms with isoelectric points of 4.55, 4.68, 4.81, 4.98 and 5.18. Upon incubation with neuraminidase the enzyme activity in the first four forms was decreased with a concommitant increase in activity in the form with the higher isoelectric point. 4. After removal of excess Triton X-100 on Bio-Gel HTP, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed seven bands of protein and corresponding bands of enzyme activity. Density gradient centrifugation of the detergent-depleted enzyme at high ionic strength revealed five multiple molecular forms with S4 values of 6.3 S, 10.2 S, 12.2 S, 14.2 S and 16.3 S. At low ionic strength, higher aggregates were observed in addition to the other forms. Dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gave one subunit only with an apparent molecular weight of 80 000. 5. These results suggest that human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase, solubilized by Triton X-100, exists in various forms differing in net charge but of apparently similar molecular dimensions. After removal of the detergent, forms with different molecular sizes are observed.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrophobic silica aerogels modified with methyl group were applied as support to immobilize Candida rugosa lipase (CRL). At the adsorption process, different alcohols were used to intensify the immobilization of CRL. The results showed that n-butanol wetting the hydrophobic support prior to contacting with enzyme solution could promote lipase activity, but the adsorption quantity onto the support decreased. Based on this, a novel immobilization method was proposed: the support contacted with enzyme solution without any alcohols, and then the immobilized enzymes were activated by 90% (V) n-butanol solution. The experimental results showed that this method could keep high adsorption quantity (413.0 mg protein/g support) and increase the lipase specific activity by more than 50%. To improve the stability of immobilized lipase, the support after adsorption was contacted with n-octane to form an oil layer covering the immobilized lipases, thus the leakage can be decreased from over 30–4% within 24 h. By utilizing proper cosolvents, a high enzyme activity and loading capacity as well as little loss of lipase was achieved without covalent linkage between the lipase and the support. This is known to be an excellent result for immobilization achieved by physical adsorption only.  相似文献   

16.
This paper describes the effect of an ionic (sodium dodecyl sulfate; SDS) and a nonionic detergent (Triton X-100) on the substrate and enzyme components of the lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) reaction. When the enzyme sources (purified or partially purified) or the respective substrates [high-density lipoproteins (HDL) or proteoliposomes] were preincubated with detergents, a consistent trend in LCAT activity was only seen when partially purified LCAT was used as the enzyme source. This trend indicated an approximately 25% increase in enzyme activity over the control when 10(-4) M SDS and 2 X 10(-3)% Triton X-100 were present in the preincubation mixtures, respectively. Those observations suggested that, during the preincubations and subsequent assays, the enzyme (in the presence of detergents) was allowed to dissociate from the endogenous substrate and subsequently interact with the exogenous substrate molecules. Additional experiments utilizing molecular-sieve chromatography with whole plasma and partially purified enzyme also showed that dissociation of LCAT/lipoprotein complexes occurred in the presence of detergent. SDS was also shown to enhance the reaction of LCAT in whole plasma with anti-LCAT antibody in an enzyme-linked immunoassay system, indicating that the detergent treatment facilitated the exposure of additional antigenic sites, perhaps via dissociation of the enzyme from plasma lipoproteins.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylyl cyclase (AC) was extracted from human myometrium with either non-ionic (Lubrol-PX or Triton X-100) or zwitterionic (3-[3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate, CHAPS) detergents. The soluble enzyme was stimulated by forskolin, a hydrophobic activator, in the presence of Mg2+ indicating that the catalytic subunit had not been damaged after solubilization. The enzyme was also activated by 5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) showing that the catalytic unit was not separated from stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gs) during the extraction. Both activators showed different effects on the stimulatory efficacy and potency of AC activity solobulized with detergents. Gel filtration of Lubrol-PX and CHAPS extracts over a Sepharose CL-2B column partially resolved AC and its complexes. The chromatographic profile for Lubrol-solubilized AC presented a main peak of about 200 kDa whereas CHAPS-solubilized AC showed a dominant peak of about 1100 kDa. The heterodisperse peaks obtained revealed that the catalytic AC subunit was not separated from Gs proteins after gel filtration, and that AC could be associated with other cellular proteins. When Lubrol extract was submitted to anionic-exchange chromatography, the enzyme was purified about 7.5 fold (enzymatic activity of 48.1 pmol/min/mg of protein). The catalytic subunit was co-eluted with both AC-activating proteins Galphas large (52.2 kDa) and Galphas small (48.7 kDa). This is the first demonstration of the stable physical association of AC with both alphas subunits of G proteins in human myometrium.  相似文献   

18.
It was shown that, among ionic and nonionic detergents tested, only Triton X-100 was able to stimulate the activity of rat liver phosphatidylserine decarboxylase, whereas other detergents were without effect or were inhibitory. The solubilization procedure of phosphatidylserine decarboxylase from mitochondrial membranes with Triton X-100 was elaborated. The dependence of the solubilized decarboxylase on the Triton X-100 to phosphatidylserine ratio and the inhibitory effect of Triton X-100 at its molar ratio to phospholipid higher than 5.6 was observed. No divalent cation requirement and no dependence of the ionic strength for the solubilized enzyme were observed. Kinetic parameters were determined.  相似文献   

19.
The enzyme guanylate cyclase is present in both particulate and soluble form in rat lung homogenates. As previously reported, the soluble enzyme can be activated by preincubation in the presence of O2. The inactive (nonactivated) soluble enzyme is also stimulated by nonionic detergents, in the order Tween 20 > Lubrol PX > Triton X-67 > Triton X-100. The activated enzyme, however, was inhibited by these detergents in the reverse order. Sodium deoxycholate and lysolecithin were potent inhibitors of both inactive and activated enzyme. The activity of the particulate enzyme was stimulated by Lubrol PX > Triton X-100 > Triton X-67 > Tween 20. At a low concentration of lysolecithin or deoxycholate the particulate activity was increased; however, when detergent/protein > 1, inhibition was seen. In the case of deoxycholate, the inhibition could be reversed if excess deoxycholate was removed either by chromatography or by forming mixed micelles with Lubrol PX; however, deoxycholate inhibition of the soluble enzyme was irreversible. The stimulation by detergents of the particulate enzyme was apparently the result of solubilization. The effects upon the activity of the soluble enzyme were interpreted in terms of a model which assumes two hydrophobic regions on the enzyme surface. The two regions differ in hydrophobicity with the more hydrophobic region only being exposed as a result of activation. Interaction of a nonionic detergent with the less hydrophobic region stimulates activity, while interaction with the more hydrophobic region results in inhibition.  相似文献   

20.
We have characterised ceramidase activity in extracts of human spleen from control subjects and from patients with Gaucher disease. In Triton X-100 extracts of control spleens, a broad pH optimum of pH 3.5-5.0 was found; no ceramidase activity was detectable at neutral or alkaline pH. About 45-60% of acid ceramidase could be extracted from spleen without detergents, but for complete extraction, Triton X-100 was required. For the radiolabelled substrate oleoylsphingosine, a Km of 0.22 +/- 0.09 mM and a Vmax of 57 +/- 11 nmol/h per mg protein was calculated in spleen from a control subject. Flat-bed isoelectric focussing in the presence of Triton X-100 revealed a pI of 6.0-7.0 for acid ceramidase; similar values were found for sphingomyelinase and glucerebrosidase. HPLC-gel filtration indicated that in the presence of Triton X-100, acid ceramidase has an Mr of about 100 kDa. In the absence of detergents, the enzyme forms high-molecular-weight aggregates. Similar aggregation behaviour was observed for sphingomyelinase, while the elution of beta-hexosaminidase was not affected by detergents. The elution profile of glucocerebrosidase was only slightly altered by Triton X-100. There was no difference in the properties of acid ceramidase present in spleen from control subjects and from patients with type I Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

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