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1.
Cellulose esters of both alkyl and aryl carboxylic acids have been prepared and tested as noncovalent adsorbents for enzymes. Phenoxyacetyl cellulose strongly bound all 10 of the enzymes tested. The bound enzymes, which were not desorbed by 1 m (NH4)2SO4 or moderate (25–50%) concentrations of nonaqueous solvents but which were at least partially desorbed by solutions containing nonionic detergents, usually exhibited nearly complete retention of catalytic activity. Other materials, paper, string, cotton, and glass beads, have been analogously derivatized with similar results. This simple and effective technique warrants consideration for applications in enzyme immobilization.  相似文献   

2.
The activity of immobilized subtilisin BPN' on pure cellulose-based membrane support was investigated using site-directed and random immobilization approaches. The catalytic activity of site-directed immobilized subtilisin on pure cellulose fiber-based materials was found to be 81% of that in homogeneous solution, while that of randomly immobilized subtilisin was 27%. Pure cellulose membrane supports provided large surface areas for high enzyme loading without diffusional limitations. The activity of immobilized subtilisin on pure cellulose support was more than twice that on a modified polyether sulfone (MPS) membrane, which was attributed to the higher hydrophilicity of cellulose. Immobilized subtilisin maintained its initial activity for 14 days at 4 degrees C and 7 days at 24 degrees C. The immobilized enzyme could resist higher temperature and operate over a wider range of pH without loss of activity. This study showed that pure cellulose fiber-based membranes are well suited for enzyme immobilization and biocatalysis.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The α-amylase of Bacillus amyloliquifaciens TSWK1-1 (GenBank Number, GQ121033) was immobilized by various methods, including ionic binding with DEAE cellulose, covalent coupling with gelatin and entrapment in polyacrylamide and agar. The immobilization of the purified enzyme was most effective with the DEAE cellulose followed by gelatin, agar and polyacrylamide. The K m increased, while V max decreased upon immobilization on various supports. The temperature and pH profiles broadened, while thermostability and pH stability enhanced after immobilization. The immobilized enzyme exhibited greater activity in various non-ionic surfactants, such as Tween-20, Tween-80 and Triton X-100 and ionic surfactant, SDS. Similarly, the enhanced stability of the immobilized α-amylase in various organic solvents was among the attractive features of the study. The reusability of the immobilized enzyme in terms of operational stability was assessed. The DEAE cellulose immobilized α-amylase retained its initial activity even after 20 consequent cycles. The DEAE cellulose immobilized enzyme hydrolyzed starch with 27 % of efficiency. In summary, the immobilization of B. amyloliquifaciens TSWK1-1 α-amylase with DEAE cellulose appeared most suitable for the improved biocatalytic properties and stability.  相似文献   

5.
This work describes the immobilization of porcine pancreatic lipase (PPL), obtained from crude extract, on silica coated with octyl groups (OS) by interfacial adsorption, a simple and low-cost immobilization protocol. The biocatalyst PPL-OS was employed to the enzymatic preparation of fatty acid esters of d-xylose, a product used especially in the field of cosmetics and pharmacy, especially dermatology, improving the functionality of epidermal cells. The yields of the immobilization in terms of enzymatic activity and protein concentration (98% and 75%, respectively) suggested that PPL present in the crude extract was selectively immobilized on the octyl-silica support, which allowed the hyperactivation of the biocatalyst (recovered activity, 144%), a phenomenon that may be attributed to the interfacial activation of the enzyme on hydrophobic surfaces. The biocatalyst PPL-OS showed to be very robust in organic medium and at high temperature, which is an extremely important characteristic to produce sugar fatty acid esters from the industrial point of view. The syntheses of xylose fatty esters (oleate, caprylate and butyrate) yielded conversions around 70% after short reaction period (2?h) at 60?°C in tert-butyl alcohol. The biocatalyst, even after incubation at 60?°C for 24?h, could be reused in four esterification cycles of 2-h reaction at 60?°C, maintaining 100% of its catalytic activity.  相似文献   

6.
The immobilization of heparinase to tresyl-chloride-activated cellulose hollow fibers for the removal of heparin from the bloodstream was examined. Whole blood can be circulated through cellulose hollow fibers without hemolysis and the tresyl chloride chemistry provides a strong linkage which limits the release of the enzyme from the support. The tresylation and immobilization methods were modified and optimized to improve the heparinase activity retained by cellulose. Pretreatment of the hollow fibers with 0.05/V sodium hydroxide increased the degree of tresylation and the immobilization yield by a factor of five. The use of triethylamine as the organic base in the tresyl chloride activation resulted in threefold greater activity retention by the support than when pyridine was used. Together, sodium hydroxide pretreatment and triethylamine enhanced the activity retained by cellulose to 26.2 +/- 7.0% of that bound to the support. The activity retention was also a function of the technique used for immobilization. The best results were achieved when the enzyme was applied to the activated fibers once every 12 to 24 h for a total of four times. The active enzyme loading on the fibers was 0.3 mg heparin degraded/h cm(2) when 4.5 mug protein/cm(2) was bound to the fibers.  相似文献   

7.
Neurotoxic organophosphates (OPs) are widely used as pesticides and for public health purposes, as well as being nerve gases. As a result of the widespread use of these compounds for agriculture, large volumes of wastewater are generated. Additionally, there are large stockpiles of the nerve gases soman, sarin and VX in the United States and elsewhere around the world. Organophosphorus hydrolase (OPH) is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of OP nerve agents. To date, however, the use of this enzyme in detoxification processes has been rather limited due to the high cost of its purification and short catalytic half-life. This paper reports the development of a cost-effective method for the production and immobilization of OPH in a pilot application in an enzyme bioreactor column for detoxification of paraoxon and coumaphos in contaminated wastewaters. A fusion between OPH and a cellulose binding domain that binds selectively to cellulose was generated to allow one-step purification and immobilization of OPH on cheap and abundantly available cellulose immobilization matrices. When packed in a column bioreactor, the immobilized fusion enzyme was able to completely degrade coumaphos up to a concentration of 0.2 mM. However, stirring of OPH immobilized on cellulose materials resulted in complete OP degradation of 1.5 mM coumaphos. The bioreactor column degraded the compounds tested at high concentration, rapidly, and without loss of process productivity for about 2 months.  相似文献   

8.
Using molecular genetic techniques, a fusion protein has been produced which contains the cellulose-binding domain (CBD) of an exoglucanase (Cex) from Cellulomonas fimi fused to a beta-glucosidase (Abg) from Agrobacterium sp. The CBD functions as an affinity tag for the simultaneous purification and immobilization of the enzyme on cellulose. Binding to cellulose was stable for prolonged periods at temperatures from 4 degrees C to at least 50 degrees C, at ionic strengths from 10 mM to greater than 1 M, and at pH values below 8. The fusion protein can be desorbed from cellulose with distilled water or at pH greater than 8. Immobilized enzyme columns of the fusion protein bound to cotton fibers exhibited stable beta-glucosidase activity for at least 10 days of continuous operation at temperatures up to 37 degrees C. At higher temperatures, the bound enzyme lost activity. The thermal stability of the fusion protein was greatly improved by immobilization. Immobilization did not alter the pH stability. Except for its ability to bind to cellulose, the properties of the fusion protein were virtually the same as those of the native enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
A number of bacterial lipases can be immobilized in a rapid and strong fashion on octyl-agarose gels (e.g., lipases from Candida antarctica, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Rhizomucor miehei, Humicola lanuginosa, Mucor javanicus, and Rhizopus niveus). Adsorption rates in absence of ammonium sulfate are higher than in its presence, opposite to the observation for typical hydrophobic adsorption of proteins. At 10 mM phosphate, adsorption of lipases is fairly selective allowing enzyme purification associated with their reversible immobilization. Interestingly, these immobilized lipase molecules show a dramatic hyperactivation. For example, lipases from R. niveus, M. miehei, and H. lanuginosa were 6-, 7-, and 20-fold more active than the corresponding soluble enzymes when catalyzing the hydrolysis of a fully soluble substrate (0.4 mM p-nitrophenyl propionate). Even higher hyperactivations and interesting changes in stereospecificity were also observed for the hydrolysis of larger soluble chiral esters (e.g. (R,S)-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutanoic ethyl ester). These results suggest that lipases recognize these "well-defined" hydrophobic supports as solid interfaces and they become adsorbed through the external areas of the large hydrophobic active centers of their "open and hyperactivated structure". This selective interfacial adsorption of lipases becomes a very promising immobilization method with general application for most lipases. Through this method, we are able to combine, via a single and easily performed adsorption step, the purification, the strong immobilization, and a dramatic hyperactivation of lipases acting in the absence of additional interfaces, (e.g., in aqueous medium with soluble substrate). Copyright 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Palmityl-substituted sepharose 4B has been used for adsorptive immobilization of heat-denatured carbonic anhydrase. The native form of this enzyme does not show any affinity for binding to this hydrophobic support. However, through the process of denaturation-renaturation performed by heating and subsequent cooling of an enzyme solution in the presence of the matrix, it was possible to obtain a catalytically active immobilized preparation, which was used successfully in continuous catalytic transformations. It is suggested that this simple procedure may provide a convenient method of immobilization for proteins, which are not normally adsorbed on hydrophobic supports.  相似文献   

11.
Bacillus subtilis lipase A (BSLA) has been extensively studied through protein engineering; however, its immobilization and behavior as an insoluble biocatalyst have not been extensively explored. In this work, for the first time, a direct immobilization of recombinant BSLA from microbial culture supernatant was reported, using chemically modified porous with different electrostatic, hydrophobic, hydrophilic, and hydrophilic−hydrophobic enzyme-support interactions. The resulting biocatalysts were evaluated based on their immobilization kinetics, activity expression (pH 7.4), thermal stability (50 °C), solvent resistance and substrate preference. Biocatalysts obtained using glyoxyl silica support resulted in the selective immobilization of BSLA, resulting in an activity recovery of 50 % and an outstanding aqueous stabilization factor of 436, and 9.5 in isopropyl alcohol, compared to the free enzyme. This selective immobilization methodology of BSLA allows to efficiently generate immobilized biocatalysts, thus avoiding laborious purification steps from cell culture supernatant, which is usually a limiting step when large amounts of enzyme variants or candidates are assessed as immobilized biocatalysts. Direct enzyme immobilization from cell supernatant provides an interesting tool which can be used to facilitate the development and assessment of immobilized biocatalysts from engineered enzyme variants and mutant libraries, especially in harsh conditions, such as high temperatures or non-aqueous solvents, or against non-water-soluble substrates. Furthermore, selective immobilization approaches from cell culture supernatant or clarified lysates could help bridging the gap between protein engineering and enzyme immobilization, allowing for the implementation of immobilization steps in high throughput enzyme screening platforms for their potential use in directed evolution campaigns.  相似文献   

12.

Neurotoxic organophosphates (OPs) are widely used as pesticides and for public health purposes, as well as being nerve gases. As a result of the widespread use of these compounds for agriculture, large volumes of wastewater are generated. Additionally, there are large stockpiles of the nerve gases soman, sarin and VX in the United States and elsewhere around the world. Organophosphorus hydrolase (OPH) is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of OP nerve agents. To date, however, the use of this enzyme in detoxification processes has been rather limited due to the high cost of its purification and short catalytic half-life. This paper reports the development of a cost-effective method for the production and immobilization of OPH in a pilot application in an enzyme bioreactor column for detoxification of paraoxon and coumaphos in contaminated wastewaters. A fusion between OPH and a cellulose binding domain that binds selectively to cellulose was generated to allow one-step purification and immobilization of OPH on cheap and abundantly available cellulose immobilization matrices. When packed in a column bioreactor, the immobilized fusion enzyme was able to completely degrade coumaphos up to a concentration of 0.2 mM. However, stirring of OPH immobilized on cellulose materials resulted in complete OP degradation of 1.5 mM coumaphos. The bioreactor column degraded the compounds tested at high concentration, rapidly, and without loss of process productivity for about 2 months.

  相似文献   

13.
Application of bacterial cellulose pellets in enzyme immobilization   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Over recent years, there has been a growing interest in the use of cellulose materials in bioprocessing technologies. Bacterial cellulose which is the pure cellulose has unique physical properties which differ from those of plant cellulose and has therefore attracted attention as a new functional material. The applications of bacterial cellulose rarely use the pellet type but it has potential in enzyme immobilization since pellet form is usually used in this field. In this research, Glucoamylase which is widely used in the food industry was immobilized on bacterial cellulose beads after testing using various activation procedures. The results showed that the epoxy method with glutaraldehyde coupling was the best method. After comparison of the different types of bacterial cellulose beads for glucoamylase immobilization, the wet bacterial cellulose beads of the smallest size (0.5–1.5 mm) were the best support. The immobilization of enzyme enhances its stability against changes in the pH value and temperature especially in the lower temperature region. The relative activity of the immobilized glucoamylase was still above 77% at pH 2.0 and it was the highest value in the literature. The relative activities were more than 68% in the lower temperature region even at 20 °C. Thus, bacterial cellulose beads are a practical potential support for the preparation of immobilized enzymes in industrial applications.  相似文献   

14.
Lipases are the most widely used enzymes in biocatalysis, and the most utilized method for enzyme immobilization is using hydrophobic supports at low ionic strength. This method allows the one step immobilization, purification, stabilization, and hyperactivation of lipases, and that is the main cause of their popularity. This review focuses on these lipase immobilization supports. First, the advantages of these supports for lipase immobilization will be presented and the likeliest immobilization mechanism (interfacial activation on the support surface) will be revised. Then, its main shortcoming will be discussed: enzyme desorption under certain conditions (such as high temperature, presence of cosolvents or detergent molecules). Methods to overcome this problem include physical or chemical crosslinking of the immobilized enzyme molecules or using heterofunctional supports. Thus, supports containing hydrophobic acyl chain plus epoxy, glutaraldehyde, ionic, vinylsulfone or glyoxyl groups have been designed. This prevents enzyme desorption and improved enzyme stability, but it may have some limitations, that will be discussed and some additional solutions will be proposed (e.g., chemical amination of the enzyme to have a full covalent enzyme-support reaction). These immobilized lipases may be subject to unfolding and refolding strategies to reactivate inactivated enzymes. Finally, these biocatalysts have been used in new strategies for enzyme coimmobilization, where the most stable enzyme could be reutilized after desorption of the least stable one after its inactivation.  相似文献   

15.
The properties of a new and commercially available amino-epoxy support (amino-epoxy-Sepabeads) have been compared to conventional epoxy supports to immobilize enzymes, using the beta-galactosidase from Aspergillus oryzae as a model enzyme. The new support has a layer of epoxy groups over a layer of ethylenediamine that is covalently bound to the support. This support has both a great anionic exchanger strength and a high density of epoxy groups. Epoxy supports require the physical adsorption of the proteins onto the support before the covalent binding of the enzyme to the epoxy groups. Using conventional supports the immobilization rate is slow, because the adsorption is of hydrophobic nature, and immobilization must be performed using high ionic strength (over 0.5 M sodium phosphate) and a support with a fairly hydrophobic nature. Using the new support, immobilization may be performed at moderately low ionic strength, it occurs very rapidly, and it is not necessary to use a hydrophobic support. Therefore, this support should be specially recommended for immobilization of enzymes that cannot be submitted to high ionic strength. Also, both supports may be expected to yield different orientations of the proteins on the support, and that may result in some advantages in specific cases. For example, the model enzyme became almost fully inactivated when using the conventional support, while it exhibited an almost intact activity after immobilization on the new support. Furthermore, enzyme stability was significantly improved by the immobilization on this support (by more than a 12-fold factor), suggesting the promotion of some multipoint covalent attachment between the enzyme and the support (in fact the enzyme adsorbed on an equivalent cationic support without epoxy groups was even slightly less stable than the soluble enzyme).  相似文献   

16.
Perflex has been introduced by E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., Inc., as a new fluorocarbon-based technology for protein immobilization. Due to the hydrophobic character of the support, however, significant loss of enzymatic activity may occur upon immobilization of certain enzymes, which appears to be due to a large conformational change of the protein ("inversion"). Pretreatment of the Perflex support with a neutral fluorosurfactant lessened the surface hydrophobicity, thus decreasing the hydrophobic interaction between the support and the protein. Modification of enzymes with a high number of fluorocarbon residues, which forms a hydrophobic "envelope" around the protein, also appears to prevent enzyme inactivation upon immobilization on Perflex support. Moreover, preactivation of the support with either perfluorooctylpropylisocyanate or reactive poly(fluoroalkyl) sugar reagents greatly improves the enzyme particle activity by increasing the amount of immobilized enzyme. Fluorosurfactant treatment of the support activated with perfluorooctylpropylisocyanate improves the retention of activity for sensitive enzymes such as alpha-chymotrypsin and increases the wetability and ease of handling of the Perflex particles.  相似文献   

17.
An esterase catalyzing the hydrolysis of acetyl ester moieties in cellulose acetate was purified 1,110-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity from the culture supernatant of Neisseria sicca SB, which can assimilate cellulose acetate as the sole carbon and energy source. The purified enzyme was a monomeric protein with a molecular mass of 40 kDa and the isoelectric point was 5.3. The pH and temperature optima of the enzyme were 8.0-8.5 and 45 degrees C. The enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of acetyl saccharides, p-nitrophenyl esters of short-chain fatty acids, and was slightly active toward aliphatic and aromatic esters. The K(m) and Vmax for cellulose acetate (degree of substitution, 0.88) and p-nitrophenyl acetate were 0.0162% (716 microM as acetyl content in the polymer) and 36.0 microM, and 66.8 and 39.1 mumol/min/mg, respectively. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and diisopropyl fluorophosphate, which indicated that the enzyme was a serine esterase.  相似文献   

18.
Alpha-amylase was covalently immobilized onto maleic anhydride copolymer films preserving activity. The initial activity of the immobilized layers strongly depended on the immobilization solution, and on the physicochemical properties of the copolymer film. Higher enzyme loading (quantified by amino acid analysis using HPLC) and activity (measured by following starch hydrolysis) were attainable onto hydrophilic, highly swelling 3-D poly(ethylene-alt-maleic anhydride) (PEMA) copolymer films, while immobilization onto hydrophobic poly(octadecene-alt-maleic anhydride) (POMA) copolymer films resulted in low content enzyme layers and lower activity. No significant activity was lost upon dehydration/re-hydration or storage of enzyme containing PEMA copolymer layers in deionised water for up to 48 h. In contrast, α-amylase decorated POMA films suffered a significant activity loss under those conditions. The distinct behaviours may be attributed to the different intrinsic physicochemical properties of the copolymer films. The compact, hydrophobic POMA films possibly favours hydrophobic interactions between the hydrophobic moieties of the protein and the surface, which may result in conformational changes, and consequent loss of activity. Surprisingly, residual activity was found after harsh treatments of active α-amylase PEMA based layers revealing that immobilization onto the hydrophilic polymer films improved the stability of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
In order to obtain an economical, efficient and selective system for glycoprotein modification we prepared reactors with immobilized neuraminidase or (and) galactose oxidase. High storage and operational stability of the enzyme reactors was obtained by their immobilization through the carbohydrate parts of the enzyme molecules to hydrazide-modified supports. Magnetic and non-magnetic forms of bead cellulose and poly(HEMA-co-EDMA) microspheres were used for immobilization. These reactors can be used almost universally for the activation of ligands and for labelling of substances having a carbohydrate moiety.  相似文献   

20.
Polyaniline as a support for urease immobilization   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Polyaniline synthesized by chemical oxidative polymerization was used as an immobilization support for jack bean urease. Such immobilized enzyme has a good catalytic activity, storage stability, and reusability. Properties of free and immobilized urease were compared. Blends of polystyrene, cellulose acetate and poly(methyl methacrylate) with polyaniline were used for urease immobilization as well.  相似文献   

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