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1.
Urease from dehusked seeds of watermelon was immobilized in 1.5% agarose gel with 53.9% entrapment. There was negligible leaching (<10% at 4°C) and the same gel membrane could repeatedly be used for seven days. The immobilization exhibited no apparent change in the optimum pH but there was a significant decrease in the optimum temperature (50°C as compared to 65°C for soluble urease). The immobilized urease revealed an apparentK m of 9.3±0.3 mM; 1.2 times lower than the soluble enzyme (11.4±0.2 mM). Unlike soluble enzyme which was inhibited at 200 mM urea, the immobilized urease was inhibited at 600 mM of urea and above, and about 47% activity was retained at 2 M urea. The time-dependent thermal inactivation kinetics at 48 and 52°C was found to be biphasic, in which half of the initial activity was destroyed more rapidly than the remaining half. These gel membranes were also used for estimating the urea content of the blood samples from the University hospital. The results obtained matched well with those obtained by the usual method employed in the clinical pathology laboratory. The significance of these observations is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Jack bean urease has been immobilized on arylamine glass beads (200–400 mesh size, 75–100 Å pore size) and its properties compared with soluble enzyme. The binding of urease was 13.71 mg per gram beads. The Km for soluble and immobilized urease for urea was 4.20 mM and 8.81 mM, respectively. Vmax values of urease decreased from 200 to 43.48 μmol of ammonia formed per min per mg protein at 37°C on immobilization. Both pH and buffer ions influenced the activities of soluble as well as immobilized urease. Soluble urease exhibited pH optima at 5.5 and 8.0. However, immobilized urease showed one additional pH optimum at 6.5. In comparison to phosphate buffer, citrate buffer was inhibitory to urease activity. Immobilization of urease on arylamine glass beads resulted in improved thermal, storage and operational stability. Because of inertness of support and stability of immobilized urease, the preparation can find applications in ‘artificial kidney’ and urea estimation in biological fluids viz., blood, milk etc.  相似文献   

3.
The behaviour of alginate immobilized and soluble watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris) urease in water miscible organic solvents like, acetonitrile, dimethylformamide (DMF), ethanol, methanol, and propanol is described. The organic solvents exhibited a concentration dependent inhibitory effect on both the immobilized and the soluble urease in the presence of urea. Pretreatment of soluble enzyme preparations with organic solvents in the absence of substrate for 10 min at 30°C led to rapid loss in the activity, while similar pretreatment of immobilized urease with 50% (v/v) of ethanol, propanol, and acetonitrile was ineffective. Time-dependent inactivation of immobilized urease, both in the presence and in the absence of urea, revealed stability for longer duration of time even at very high concentration of organic solvents. The soluble enzyme, on the other hand, was rapidly inactivated even at fairly lower concentrations. The results suggest that the immobilization of watermelon urease in calcium alginate make it suitable for its application in organic media. the observations are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The paper deals with kinetics of the urea hydrolysis by microbial-origin urease dissolved and immobilized on the organic silica surface. It is shown that hydrolysis kinetics for soluble urease is described by the Michaelis-Menten equation until the concentration of urea reaches 1 M. Two fractions differing in the Michaelis constant are revealed for silochrome immobilized urease. The rate of urea hydrolysis by native and immobilized urease was studied depending on the pH value in presence of the substrate in the 1 M and 5 mM concentration. The hydrolysis rate of 1 M urea in the buffer-free solution by silochrome-immobilized urease is practically independent of pH within 4.5-6.5. Application of a 2.5 mM phosphate-citrate buffer as a solvent causes an increase in the hydrolysis rate within this pH range. For a soluble urease the 1 M urea hydrolysis rate dependence on pH is ordinary at pH 5.8-6.0. If the substrate concentration is 5 mM, the pH-dependences for the rate of the urea hydrolysis by silochrome- and aerosil-immobilized urease are close and at pH above 6.0 coincide with those for a soluble enzyme. The found differences in the properties of soluble and immobilized ureases are explained by the substrate and reaction products diffusion.  相似文献   

5.
An enzymatic membrane for application in the processes of decomposition and removal of urea from aqueous solutions was prepared: jack bean urease was immobilized on an aminated polysulphone membrane by adsorption. The inhibition of the system by boric acid was studied using procedures based on the MICHAELIS-MENTEN integrated equation (non-linear regression, and the linear transformations of WALKER and SCHMIDT, JENNINGS and NIEMANN, and BOOMAN and NIEMANN). The reaction was carried out in a 100 mM phosphate buffer of pH 7.0, containing 2 mM EDTA, obtained by neutralization of orthophosphoric acid with NaOH, at an initial urea concentration of 10 mM, and a temperature of 25 °C. The reaction was initiated by the addition of the enzyme to the urea solution, and was monitored by removing samples of the reaction mixture for NH3 determinations by the phenol-hypochlorite method until the urea was exhausted. The results were compared with those obtained earlier under the same reaction conditions for free urease and urease covalently immobilized on chitosan. The inhibition was found to be competitive, similar to that of the free enzyme and urease immobilized on chitosan, with inhibition constants Ki equal to 0.36, 0.19 and 0.60 mM. The results show that adsorption of the enzyme on a polysulphone membrane changed the enzyme to a lesser degree than covalent immobilization of the enzyme on a chitosan membrane.  相似文献   

6.
《Process Biochemistry》2007,42(3):429-433
Porous silicon layers fabricated by the reaction-induced vapor phase stain etch method were coated with 5% polyethylenimine. Urease from Canavalia brasiliensis beans was immobilized on this support through covalent linking with 2.5% glutaraldehyde. The pH and temperature profile of the immobilized and free urease exhibited higher activity at pH 6.5 and 37 °C. After being stored for 30 days at 4 °C, the immobilized enzyme had 75% of the initial activity. The maximum apparent Michaelis constant for free urease (Km) was 94.33 mM whereas for immobilized urease was 53.04 mM. The maximum reaction velocity (Vmax) for free urease was 3.51 mmol/min and for immobilized urease was 1.57 mmol/min.  相似文献   

7.
High throughput covalent urease immobilization was performed through the amide bond formation between the urease and the amino-functional MNPs. The enzyme’s performances, including shelf-life, reusability, enzymatic kinetics, and the enzyme relative activity in organic media was improved. At optimal conditions, the immobilization efficiency was calculated about 95.0% with keeping 94.7% of the urease initial specific activity. The optimal pH for maximum activity of the free and immobilized urease was calculated as 7.0 at 37.0 °C and 8.0 at 60.0 °C, respectively. The kinetics studies showed the Km of 26.0 mM and 8.0 mM and the Vmax of 5.31 μmol mg−1 min−1 and 3.93 μmol mg−1 min−1 for the free and immobilized urease, respectively. The ratio Kcat/Km as a measure of catalytic efficiency and enzyme specificity was calculated as 0.09 mg mL−1 min−1 and 0.22 mg mL−1 min−1 for the free and immobilized urease, respectively, indicating an improvement in the enzymatic kinetics. The shelf-life and operational studies of immobilized urease indicated that approximately 97.7% and 88.5% of its initial activity was retained after 40 days and 17 operational cycles, respectively. The immobilized urease was utilized to urea removal from water samples with an efficiency between 91.5–95.0%.  相似文献   

8.
The adsorption capacity and immobilization rate of two Eupergit® supports for acid urease was studied by varying the ionic strength and enzyme preparation concentration in the immobilizing solution at pH 7. Eupergit® C250 L yielded a series of derivatives with enzyme loadings (YP/B) ranging from 48 to 171 mg of bovine serum albumin equivalent (BSAE) per gram of dry support (ds). Use of drastic postimmobilization conditions at pH 9 for 3–9 days yielded a slight decrease (8–14%) in the initial activity of immobilized enzymes and a limited increase in the stabilization factor (1.1–1.5), as assessed by accelerated aging tests at 65°C. Further storage tests at 4°C in the wet state showed that the activity of several derivatives either stabilized or not was practically constant for as long as 547 days. Both free enzyme and immobilized acid urease derivatives exhibited a kinetic pattern of the Michaelis–Menten type. Using the Eadie–Hofstee diagram, the specific ammonia formation rate constant for free (kcat) or immobilized (k′cat) enzyme resulted to be little affected by immobilization (kcat ≈ k′cat ≈ 18.86 ± 0.34 IU/mg BSAE), whereas the apparent Michaelis constant for immobilized enzymes exhibited a statistically significant increase at P < 0.05 from the intrinsic value (2.55 ± 0.14 mM) for free enzyme to 5.38 ± 0.87 mM as YP/B increased to 171 mg BSAE/g ds. By estimating the observable Thiele modulus (?obs), the activity of the biocatalyst with the greatest enzyme loading at the lowest urea concentrations tested (0.833 mM) was reduced by a factor of about 2 due to internal diffusional limitations. By operating in the pseudofirst‐order regime with immobilized derivatives at YP/B about 126 mg BSAE/g ds, their activity after grinding was no more limited by intraparticle diffusion and approached the value for free enzyme. © 2012 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2012  相似文献   

9.
Immobilization of urease on vermiculite   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Urease (EC 3.5.1.5) of high activity was obtained when the enzyme was immobilized on vermiculite crosslinked with 2.5% glutaraldehyde in chilled EDTA-phosphate buffer (pH 5.5). The highest activity of the immobilized enzyme was at 65°C and pH 6.5 while the optimum temperature for free urease was found to be 25°C. The thermal stability of immobilized urease was observed to be much better than that of the free urease. When stored at 4°C, urease immobilized on vermiculite retained 69 to 81% of its activity after 60 days and 61 to 75% of its original activity was retained after 4 repeated uses.  相似文献   

10.
This work is aimed to immobilize partially purified horseradish peroxidase (HRP) on wool activated by multifunctional reactive center, namely cyanuric chloride. The effect of cyanuric chloride concentration, pH and enzyme concentration on immobilization of HRP was studied. FT-IR and SEM analyses were detected for wool, activated wool and immobilized wool-HRP. The wool-HRP, prepared at 2% (w/v) cyanuric chloride and pH 5.0, retained 50% of initial activity after seven reuses. The wool-HRP showed broad optimum pH at 7.0 and 8.0, which was higher than that of the soluble HRP (pH 6.0). The soluble HRP had an optimum temperature of 30 °C, which was shifted to 40 °C for immobilized enzyme. The soluble and wool-HRP were stable up to 30 and 40 °C after incubation for 1 h, respectively. The apparent kinetic constant values (Kms) of wool-HRP were 10 mM for guiacol and 2.5 mM for H2O2, which were higher than that of soluble HRP. The wool-HRP was remarkably more stable against proteolysis mediated by trypsin. The wool-HRP exhibited more resistance to heavy metal induced inhibition. The wool-HRP was more stable to the denaturation induced by urea, Triton X-100, isopropanol, butanol and dioxan. The wool-HRP was found to be the most stable under storage. In conclusion, the wool-HRP could be more suitable for several industrial and environmental purposes.  相似文献   

11.
Urease from seeds of water melon was purified to apparent homogeniety upto a sp act of 3750 units/mg protein with 31% recovery. Enzyme showed single protein band on native PAGE by urease specific staining. The mol wt of the enzyme was 4,70,000 and the preparation was free from bound nucleotides (A280/A260=1.14). The enzyme exhibited maximum activity in 50 mM Tris-acetate buffer (pH 8.5). The Km for urease was 8 mM. The enzyme was not inhibited by 25 mM of EDTA in 50 mM Tris-acetate buffer (pH 8.0 and 8.5).  相似文献   

12.
This paper demonstrates the direct immobilization of peroxidase from ammonium sulfate fractionated white radish proteins on an inorganic support, Celite 545. The adsorbed peroxidase was crosslinked by using glutaraldehyde. The activity yield for white radish peroxidase was adsorbed on Celite 545 was 70% and this activity was decreased and remained 60% of the initial activity after crosslinking by glutaraldehyde. The pH and temperature-optima for both soluble and immobilized peroxidase was at pH 5.5 and 40°C. Immobilized peroxidase retained higher stability against heat and water-miscible organic solvents. In the presence of 5.0 mM mercuric chloride, immobilized white radish peroxidase retained 41% of its initial activity while the free enzyme lost 93% activity. Soluble enzyme lost 61% of its initial activity while immobilized peroxidase retained 86% of the original activity when exposed to 0.02 mM sodium azide for 1 h. The Km values were 0.056 and 0.07 mM for free and immobilized enzyme, respectively. Immobilized white radish peroxidase exhibited lower Vmax as compared to the soluble enzyme. Immobilized peroxidase preparation showed better storage stability as compared to its soluble counterpart.  相似文献   

13.
《Biochemical education》1999,27(2):114-117
An experiment is described in which students carry out urease purification, immobilization and its application in blood urea estimation. Urease from pigeonpea is partially purified using acetone fractionation and then immobilized on calcium alginate in the form of beads. The immobilized enzyme has a better shelf-life at 4°C than soluble enzyme. Various aspects of enzyme immobilization are discussed. Blood urea estimation is carried out with immobilized enzyme beads and the beads can be used repeatedly for this purpose making it an economical procedure compared to commercial kits.  相似文献   

14.
Amyloglucosidase was immobilized on a copolymer of methyl methacrylate and 2-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate. The resulting immobilized amyloglucosidase has 19% of the soluble enzyme specific activity. The pH optimum of immobilized amyloglucosidase is shifted towards acidity by 1.9 units. The temperature optimum of immobilized enzyme is shifted upward by 5°C. The immobilized amyloglucosidase has the maximum stability at pH 4.6, whereas the soluble enzyme has maximum stability at pH 5.5. While soluble amyloglucosidase has a maximum thermal stability at 50°C, the stability of the immobilized amyloglucosidase steadily decreases with the increase in temperature.  相似文献   

15.
The enzyme inulinase (2,1-β-d-fructan fructanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.7), prepared from Kluyveromyces marxianus has been immobilized using an inorganic solid support, molecular sieve 4A via the metal link method. The immobilized enzyme had around 22 units of inulinase activity per g of the support with retention of 72% of the original activity. The optimum protein to molecular sieve ratio for the maximum retention of inulinase activity was 9 mg/g molecular sieve. The properties of soluble and immobilized enzyme differed in many respects. The optimum pH of the enzyme shifted from 6 to 5 and the optimum temperature of enzyme activity changed from 50 to 55°C. Km values were 6.7 mM for soluble enzyme and 10 mM for immobilized enzyme. The heat stability of the enzyme was improved by immobilization. Immobilized enzyme retained about 76% of the original activity after 40 days of storage at room temperature (30±2°C).  相似文献   

16.
A new matrix for enzyme immobilization of urease was obtained by incorporating rhodium nanoparticles (5% on activated charcoal) and chemical bonding of chitosan with different concentration (0.15%; 0.3%; 0.5%; 1.0%; 1.5%) in previously chemically modified AN copolymer membrane. The basic characteristics of the chitosan modified membranes were investigated. The SEM analyses were shown essential morphology change in the different modified membranes. Both the amount of bound protein and relative activity of immobilized enzyme were measured. A higher activity (about 77.44%) was measured for urease bound to AN copolymer membrane coated with 1.0% chitosan and containing rhodium nanoparticles. The basic characteristics (pH(opt), T(opt), thermal, storage and operation stability) of immobilized enzyme on this optimized modified membrane were also determined. The prepared enzyme membrane was used for the construction of amperometric biosensor for urea detection. Its basic amperometric characteristics were investigated. A calibration plot was obtained for urea concentration ranging from 1.6 to 23 mM. A linear interval was detected along the calibration curve from 1.6 to 8.2mM. The sensitivity of the constructed biosensor was calculated to be 3.1927 μAmM(-1)cm(-2). The correlation coefficient for this concentration range was 0.998. The detection limit with regard to urea was calculated to be 0.5mM at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3. The biosensor was employed for 10 days while the maximum response to urea retained 86.8%.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Extracellular lipase from an indigenous Bacillus aryabhattai SE3-PB was immobilized in alginate beads by entrapment method. After optimization of immobilization conditions, maximum immobilization efficiencies of 77%?±?1.53% and 75.99%?±?3.49% were recorded at optimum concentrations of 2% (w/v) sodium alginate and 0.2?M calcium chloride, respectively, for the entrapped enzyme. Biochemical properties of both free and immobilized lipase revealed no change in the optimum temperature and pH of both enzyme preparations, with maximum activity attained at 60?°C and 9.5, respectively. In comparison to free lipase, the immobilized enzyme exhibited improved stability over the studied pH range (8.5–9.5) and temperature (55–65?°C) when incubated for 3?h. Furthermore, the immobilized lipase showed enhanced enzyme-substrate affinity and higher catalytic efficiency when compared to soluble enzyme. The entrapped enzyme was also found to be more stable, retaining 61.51% and 49.44% of its original activity after being stored for 30 days at 4?°C and 25?°C, respectively. In addition, the insolubilized enzyme exhibited good reusability with 18.46% relative activity after being repeatedly used for six times. These findings suggest the efficient and sustainable use of the developed immobilized lipase for various biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

18.
Urease (EC 3.5.1.5) was covalently attached through glutaraldehyde to partially hydrolysed nylon 6/6 tubes. The highest activity of immobilized enzyme was obtained at 65?°C and pH 6.5, while the optimum temperature for free urease was found to be 25?°C. Immobilized urease showed an improved thermal stability in comparison to free urease. It retained 76% of the original activity after 60 days when stored at 4?°C and 78% of the activity after 5 repeated uses.  相似文献   

19.
Enzyme urease is extracted from the discarded seeds of pumpkin. Urease was purified to apparent homogeneity (5.2 fold) by heat treatment at 48 ± 1°C and gel filtration through Sephadex G-200. Effect of model metal ions on the activity of the homogeneous enzyme preparation (sp. activity 353 U/mg protein, A280/A260 = 1.12) of soluble as well as immobilized enzyme was investigated. The soluble and immobilized urease has been used for the quantitative estimation of general water pollution with heavy metal ions like Hg2+, Cu2+, Cd2+, and Co2+. The measurements of the urease residual activity have been carried out in tris-acetate buffer after pre-incubation of model metal salt. The inhibition was found to be biphasic with an initial rapid loss of activity and remainder in slow phase of 10∼15 min. The immobilization was done in 3.5% alginate beads leading to 86% of entrapment. There was no leaching of the enzyme over a period of 15 days at 4°C. The beads were fairly stable up to 50°C and exhibited activity even at −10°C. The inhibition by these ions was non-competitive and irreversible, hence could not be restored by dialysis. Based on the values of inhibition constant Ki the heavy-metal ions were found to inhibit urease in the following order Hg2+ > Cu2+ > Cd2+ > Co2+.  相似文献   

20.
Jack bean urease (urea aminohydrolase, E.C. 3.5.1.5) was entrapped into chitosan–alginate polyelectrolyte complexes (C-A PEC) and poly(acrylamide-co-acrylic acid)/κ-carrageenan (P(AAm-co-AA)/carrageenan) hydrogels for the potential use in immobilization of urease, not previously reported. The effects of pH, temperature, storage stability, reuse number, and thermal stability on the free and immobilized urease were examined. For the free and immobilized urease into C-A PEC and P(AAm-co-AA)/carrageenan, the optimum pH was found to be 7.5 and 8, respectively. The optimum temperature of the free and immobilized enzymes was also observed to be 55 and 60 °C, respectively. Michaelis–Menten constant (K m) values for both immobilized urease were also observed smaller than free enzyme. The storage stability values of immobilized enzyme systems were observed as 48 and 70%, respectively, after 70 days. In addition to this, it was observed that, after 20th use in 5 days, the retained activities for immobilized enzyme into C-A PEC and P(AAm-co-AA)/carrageenan matrixes were found as 55 and 89%, respectively. Thermal stability of the free urease was also increased by a result of immobilization.  相似文献   

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