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1.
Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) has been adsorbed on octyl-agarose or covalently immobilized on cyanogen bromide agarose. Then, both biocatalysts have been modified with ethylenediamine (EDA) or 2,4,6-trinitrobenzensulfonic acid (TNBS) just using one reactive or using several modifications in a sequential way (the most complex preparation was CALB–TNBS–EDA–TNBS). Covalently immobilized enzyme decreased the activity by 40–60% after chemical modifications, while the adsorbed enzyme improved the activity on p-nitrophenylbutyrate (pNPB) by EDA modification (even by a 2-fold factor). These biocatalysts were further characterized. The results showed that the effects of the chemical modification on the enzyme features were strongly dependent on the immobilization protocol utilized, the experimental conditions where the catalyst will be utilized, and the substrate. Significant changes in the activity/pH profile were observed after the chemical modifications. The effect of the modifications on the enzyme activity depends on the substrate and the reaction conditions: enzyme specificity is strongly altered by the chemical modification. Moreover, enzyme activity versus pNPB (using octyl-CALB–EDA) or versus R methyl mandelate (using octyl-CALB–TNBS) increased by almost a 2-fold factor at pH 5. The stability of the modified enzymes at different pH and in the presence of organic solvents generally decreased after the modifications, usually by no more than a 2-fold factor. However, under some conditions, some stabilization was found. CALB enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of R/S methyl mandelate could be also improved by these chemical modifications (e.g., E-value went from 11 to 16 using octyl-CALB–TNBS at pH 5). Therefore, solid phase chemical modification of immobilized lipases may become a powerful tool in the design of lipase libraries with very different properties, each immobilized preparation may be used to produce a variety of forms with altered properties.  相似文献   

2.
The lipases from Thermomyces lanuginosus and Pseudomonas cepacia have been immobilized on octyl and cyanogen bromide (CNBr) agarose beads. The immobilization on octyl-agarose is slowed with increasing ionic strength, while the immobilization on CNBr is not significantly affected by the ionic strength. The inhibition of the immobilized preparations with diethyl p-nitrophenylphosphate (D-pNPP) was analyzed. The inhibition was more rapid using octyl-lipase preparations than using covalent preparations, and the covalent preparations were much more sensitive to the reaction medium. The addition of detergent increased the inhibition rate of the covalent preparation while an increase on the ionic strength produced a slowdown of the inhibition rate by D-pNPP for both lipases. The effect of the medium on the activity versus fully soluble substrate (methyl mandelate) was in the same direction. The octyl preparations presented a slight decrease in activity when comparing the results using different concentrations of sodium phosphate buffer (between 0.025 and 1 M), while the CNBr preparations suffered drastic drops in its activity at high ionic strength.The results confirm that the lipases immobilized on octyl agarose presented their open form stabilized while the covalent preparation maintains a closing/opening equilibrium that may be modulated by altering the medium.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of the immobilization protocol and some experimental conditions (pH value and presence of acetonitrile) on the regioselective hydrolysis of triacetin to diacetin catalyzed by lipases has been studied. Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) and lipase from Rhizomucor miehei (RML) were immobilized on Sepabeads (commercial available macroporous acrylic supports) activated with glutaraldehyde (covalent immobilization) or octadecyl groups (adsorption via interfacial activation). All the biocatalysts accumulated diacetin. Covalently immobilized RML was more active towards rac-methyl mandelate than the adsorbed RML. However, this covalent RML preparation presented the lowest activity towards triacetin. For this reason, this preparation was discarded as biocatalyst for this reaction. At pH 7, acyl migration occurred giving a mixture of 1,2 and 1,3 diacetin, but at pH 5.5, only 1,2 diacetin was produced. Yields were improved at acidic pH values and in the presence of 20% acetonitrile (to over 95%). RML immobilized on octadecyl Sepabeads was proposed as optimal preparation, mainly due to its higher specific activity. Each enzyme preparation presented very different properties. Moreover, changes in the reaction conditions affected the various immobilized enzymes in a different way.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) immobilized on octyl-agarose (OC) was submitted to coating with polyethylenimine (PEI) and dextran sulfate (DS). Using lowly loaded enzyme preparations, the properties of OC-CALB preparations hardly improved, suggesting too large the distance between enzyme molecules. However, using OC-CALB preparations with maximum loading, CALB stability was greatly improved in different conditions after PEI coating. Moreover, the CALB release from the OC support in the presence of detergents, or during thermal or organic solvent inactivations was greatly reduced after this treatment (PEI plus DS coating). The results pointed that the main positive effect of this coating could be derived from the physical intermolecular crosslinking of the CALB molecules with the polymers that reduce the enzyme desorption from the support. The coating of OC-CALB-PEI with DS only produced a minimal improvement on enzyme performance. Even though the enzyme release was much more difficult after physical crosslinking, all enzyme molecules could be released from the OC support combining an ionic detergent (SDS), high buffer concentration, pH 3 and 45?°C, while using the OC-CALB just 2% SDS at pH 7 and 25?°C was enough to release all enzyme. The support could be reused several cycles. Thus, this strategy permitted to greatly reduce the enzyme desorption during operation and to improve enzyme stability while keeping the enzyme immobilization reversibility.  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.
In this work different protocols to immobilize d-amino acid oxidase (DAAO) on sepabeads were assayed (ionic adsorption on different supports and covalent attachment using glutaraldehyde), studying the stability of the final preparations. The highest stability was achieved by the treatment with glutaraldehyde of DAAO adsorbed on Sepabeads EA (a commercial aminated support having ethylendiamine groups). In fact, this derivative was six times more stable than the enzyme adsorbed only by ionic interaction and much more stable than the soluble enzyme. The effect of the nature of the amino groups in the support was then analyzed. DAAO adsorbed on sepabeads coated with polyethylenimine (PEI) yielded a higher stability than the preparation on Sepabeads EA. The treatment with glutaraldehyde of DAAO adsorbed on Sepabeads PEI yielded the best results in terms of stability, being 200 times more stable than DAAO adsorbed onto Sepabeads EA. The effects of polyethylenimine size and glutaraldehyde concentration were also studied. sepabeads coated with 25 kDa polyethylenimine and treatment with 0.5% glutaraldehyde solution were the optimal parameters regarding the stability (the half life time was 9 h at 56° C, 600 times more stable than the soluble enzyme). Moreover, the optimal derivative showed a maximum load capacity of 15 mg/g of support. This derivative seems to fulfill the requirements for industrial applications.  相似文献   

7.
《Process Biochemistry》2014,49(4):604-616
Lecitase Ultra (a quimeric fosfolipase commercialized by Novozymes) has been immobilized via two different strategies: mild covalent attachment on cyanogen bromide agarose beads and interfacial activation on octyl-agarose beads. Both immobilized preparations have been submitted to different individual or cascade chemical modifications (amination, glutaraldehyde or 2,4,6-trinitrobenzensulfonic acid (TNBS) modification) in order to check the effect of these modifications on the catalytic features of the immobilized enzymes (including stability and substrate specificity under different conditions). The first point to be remarked is that the immobilization strongly affects the enzyme catalytic features: octyl-Lecitase was more active versus p-nitrophenylbutyrate but less active versus methyl phenylacetate than the covalent preparations. Moreover, the effects of the chemical modifications strongly depend on the immobilization strategy used. For example, using one immobilization protocol a modification improves activity, while for the other immobiled enzyme is even negative. Most of the modifications presented a positive effect on some enzyme properties under certain conditions, although in certain cases that modification presented a negative effect under other conditions. For example, glutaraldehyde modification of immobilized or modified and aminated enzyme permitted to improve enzyme stability of both immobilized enzymes at pH 7 and 9 (around a 10-fold), but only the aminated enzyme improved the enzyme stability at pH 5 by glutaraldehyde treatment. This occurred even though some intermolecular crosslinking could be detected via SDS-PAGE. Amination improved the stability of octyl-Lecitase, while it reduced the stability of the covalent preparation. Modification with TNBS only improved enzyme stability of the covalent preparation at pH 9 (by a 10-fold factor).  相似文献   

8.
This paper shows the purification and immobilization of a very interesting thermophilic alcohol dehydrogenase from Thermus thermophilus HB27 cloned in Escherichia coli. The purification was based on a first thermal treatment of the crude extract, that leaves the target enzyme in the supernatant, followed by the adsorption of most contaminant proteins in a IMAC column (the target protein did not adsorb on these columns due to the poorness of His residues). Final purification factor was around a 9-fold factor (no other protein bands were detected in SDS-PAGE gels) with an overall yield around 80%. Covalent immobilization of the enzyme on very different supports only permitted to improve the enzyme stability by a 5–10-fold factor, very similarly to the results obtained by the adsorption of the enzyme on polyethyleneimine coated supports. This enzyme adsorbed by ionic exchange maintained the activity unaltered during immobilization which was a very rapid process, and was more stable than the covalent preparations in the presence of organic solvents, and the enzyme was quite strongly adsorbed on the support. Therefore, it was proposed as a good option to prepare industrial biocatalysts of the enzyme. This preparation was utilized in the asymmetric reduction of acetophenone to produce (S)-(−)-1-phenylethanol, with an enantiomeric excess of more than 99%.  相似文献   

9.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from Thermus thermophilus is a homotrimeric enzyme that tends to dissociate at acidic pH values. GDH is readily adsorbed on highly activated anionic exchangers (HAAE), but hardly adsorbed on lowly activated supports (LAAE) or on highly activated epoxy supports. When using amino-epoxy supports, GDH immobilized on HAAE-epoxy and more slowly on LAAE-epoxy supports. Both immobilized biocatalysts were incubated at pH 10 for different times to increase the multipoint covalent attachment. LAAE-epoxy-GDH was stable at pH 4 and 25 °C, the enzyme stability did not depend on the enzyme concentration and did not release any subunit to the supernatant, in opposition to the results obtained using HAAE-epoxy supports. The general application of this strategy to stabilize multimeric enzymes was verified by immobilizing a crude protein extract. It seems that proteins adsorb on LAAE by the larger region of their surface (that is the one that involves the highest number of enzyme subunits), since it is the only area large enough to permit a multipoint ionic exchange on this LAAE. On the contrary, using HAAE, some proteins may become adsorbed by clusters that were rich in anionic groups and located in a corner of the multimer, involving only some of the subunits in the enzyme immobilization. That way, a careful design of the design of the support permits to take full advantage of the immobilization on heterofunctional supports.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
New tailor-made anionic exchange resins have been prepared, based on films of large polyethylenimine polymers (e.g., MW 25,000) completely coating, via covalent immobilization, the surface of different porous supports (agarose, silica, polymeric resins). Most proteins contained in crude extracts from different sources have been very strongly adsorbed on them. Ionic exchange properties of such composites strongly depend on the size of polyethylenimine polymers as well as on the exact conditions of the covalent coating of the solids with the polymer. On the contrary, similar coating protocols yield similar matrices by using different porous supports as starting material. For example, 77% of all proteins contained in crude extracts from Escherichia coli were adsorbed, at low ionic strength, on the best matrices, and less than 15% of the adsorbed proteins were eluted from the support in the presence of 0.3 M NaCl. Under these conditions, 100% of the adsorbed proteins were eluted from conventional DEAE supports. Such polyethylenimine-support composites were also very suitable to perform very strong and nondistorting reversible immobilization of industrial enzymes. For example, lipase from Candida rugosa (CRL), beta-galactosidase from Aspergillus oryzae and D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO) from Rhodotorula gracilis, were adsorbed on such matrices in a few minutes at pH 7.0 and 4 degrees C. Immobilized enzymes preserved 100% of catalytic activity and remained fully immobilized in 0.2 M NaCl. In addition to that, CRL and DAAO were highly stabilized upon immobilization. Stabilization of DAAO, a dimeric enzyme, seems to be due to the involvement of both enzyme subunits in the ionic adsorption.  相似文献   

13.
Novozyme 435, which is a commercial immobilized lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB), has been proven to be inadequate for the kinetic resolution of rac‐indanyl acetate. As it has been previously described that different immobilization protocols may greatly alter lipase features, in this work, CALB was covalently immobilized on epoxy Immobead‐350 (IB‐350) and on glyoxyl‐agarose to ascertain if better kinetic resolution would result. Afterwards, all CALB biocatalysts were utilized in the hydrolytic resolution of rac‐indanyl acetate and rac‐(chloromethyl)‐2‐(o‐methoxyphenoxy) ethyl acetate. After optimization of the immobilization protocol on IB‐350, its loading capacity was 150 mg protein/g dried support. Furthermore, the CALB‐IB‐350 thermal and solvent stabilities were higher than that of the soluble enzyme (e.g., by a 14‐fold factor at pH 5–70°C and by a 11‐fold factor in dioxane 30%–65°C) and that of the glyoxyl‐agarose‐CALB (e.g., by a 12‐fold factor at pH 10–50°C and by a 21‐fold factor in dioxane 30%–65°C). The CALB‐IB‐350 preparation (with 98% immobilization yield and activity versus p‐nitrophenyl butyrate of 6.26 ± 0.2 U/g) was used in the hydrolysis of rac‐indanyl acetate using a biocatalyst/substrate ratio of 2:1 and a pH value of 7.0 at 30°C for 24 h. The conversion obtained was 48% and the enantiomeric excess of the product (e.e.p) was 97%. These values were much higher than the ones obtained with Novozyme 435, 13% and 26% of conversion and e.e.p, respectively. © 2018 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 34:878–889, 2018  相似文献   

14.
Immobilization of enzymes and proteins on activated supports permits the simplification of the reactor design and may be used to improve some enzyme properties. In this sense, supports containing epoxy groups seem to be useful to generate very intense multipoint covalent attachment with different nucleophiles placed on the surface of enzyme molecules (e.g., amino, thiol, hydroxyl groups). However, the intermolecular reaction between epoxy groups and soluble enzymes is extremely slow. To solve this problem, we have designed "tailor-made" heterofunctional epoxy supports. Using these, immobilization of enzymes is performed via a two-step process: (i) an initial physical or chemical intermolecular interaction of the enzyme surface with the new functional groups introduced on the support surface and (ii) a subsequent intense intramolecular multipoint covalent reaction between the nucleophiles of the already immobilized enzyme and the epoxy groups of the supports. The first immobilization may involve different enzyme regions, which will be further rigidified by multipoint covalent attachment. The design of some heterofunctional epoxy supports and the performance of the immobilization protocols are described here. The whole protocol to have an immobilized and stabilized enzyme could take from 3 days to 1 week.  相似文献   

15.
This work reviews the stripping off, role of water molecules in activity, and flexibility of immobilized Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB). Employment of CALB in ring opening polyester synthesis emphasizing on a polylactide is discussed in detail. Execution of enzymes in place of inorganic catalysts is the most green alternative for sustainable and environment friendly synthesis of products on an industrial scale. Robust immobilization and consequently performance of enzyme is the essential objective of enzyme application in industry. Water bound to the surface of an enzyme (contact class of water molecules) is inevitable for enzyme performance; it controls enzyme dynamics via flexibility changes and has intensive influence on enzyme activity. The value of pH during immobilization of CALB plays a critical role in fixing the active conformation of an enzyme. Comprehensive selection of support and protocol can develop a robust immobilized enzyme thus enhancing its performance. Organic solvents with a log P value higher than four are more suitable for enzymatic catalysis as these solvents tend to strip away very little of the enzyme surface bound water molecules. Alternatively ionic liquid can work as a more promising reaction media. Covalent immobilization is an exclusively reliable technique to circumvent the leaching of enzymes and to enhance stability. Activated polystyrene nanoparticles can prove to be a practical and economical support for chemical immobilization of CALB. In order to reduce the E-factor for the synthesis of biodegradable polymers; enzymatic ring opening polyester synthesis (eROPS) of cyclic monomers is a more sensible route for polyester synthesis. Synergies obtained from ionic liquids and immobilized enzyme can be much effective eROPS.  相似文献   

16.
In this work Candida antarctica lipase type B (CALB) was immobilized on agarose and chitosan. The influence of activation agents (glycidol, glutaraldehyde and epichlorohydrin) and immobilization time (5, 24 and 72 h) on hydrolytic activity, thermal and alkaline stabilities of the biocatalyst was evaluated. Protein concentration and enzymatic activity in the supernatant were determined during the immobilization process. More active derivatives were attained when the enzymatic extract was first purified through dialysis. The highest activities achieved were: for agarose-glyoxyl (with glycidol), 845 U/g of gel, after 72 h of immobilization; for chitosan-glutaraldehyde and agarose-glutaraldehyde, respectively, 1209 U/g of gel and 2716 U/g of gel, after 5 h of immobilization. Thermal stability was significantly increased, when compared to the soluble enzyme: 20-fold for agarose-glyoxyl (with glycidol)-CALB, 18-fold for chitosan-glutaraldehyde-CALB and 21-fold for agarose-glutaraldehyde. The best derivative, 58-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme, was obtained when CALB was immobilized on chitosan activated in two steps, using glycidol and glutaraldehyde, 72 h immobilization time. The stabilization degree of the derivative increased with the immobilization time, an indication that a multipoint covalent attachment between enzyme and the support had really occurred.  相似文献   

17.
Enzyme immobilization has attracted continuous attention in the fields of fine chemistry, biomedicine, and biosensor. The performance of immobilized enzyme largely depends on the structure of supports. Nanostructured supports are believed to be able to retain the catalytic activity as well as ensure the immobilization efficiency of enzyme to a high extent. Electrospinning provides a simple and versatile method to fabricate nanofibrous supports. Compared with other nanostructured supports (e.g. mesoporous silica, nanoparticles), nanofibrous supports show many advantages for their high porosity and interconnectivity. This review mainly discusses the recent advances in using nanofibers as hosts for enzyme immobilization by two different methods, surface attachment and encapsulation. Surface attachment refers to physical adsorption or covalent attachment of enzymes on pristine or modified nanofibrous supports, and encapsulation means electrospinning a mixture of enzyme and polymer. We make a detailed comparison between these two immobilization approaches and highlight their distinct characteristics. The prospective applications of enzyme immobilized electrospun nanofibers in the development of biosensors, biofuel cells and biocatalysts are also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) has been modified using succinic polyethyleneglycol via the carbodiimide route. Immobilized enzyme (on octyl Sepharose or Eupergit C) has been used, to take advantage of the solid phase. Modification of immobilized CALB's native amino groups did not produce a significant alteration of CALB. However, if the enzyme was previously aminated, around 14–15 PEG molecules could be introduced per enzyme molecule. Also, it has been found that succinic groups are far more reactive than acetic acid following this strategy.Even after this drastic double modification, the functional properties of the enzyme have not been impoverished to a large extent: stability decreased only to some extent (by a 5–6 fold factor), activity versus some substrates even increased (e.g., around 60% using p-nitrophenyl butyrate). It has been found that both modifications (amination and pegylation) have very different effects on enzyme properties when performed on CALB immobilized on Eupergit C or octyl Sepharose. For example, activity versus pNPP increased using CALB-octyl Sepharose while it decreased when using Eupergit C following amination and PEGylation. The effects also depend on the reaction and substrate, for example in hydrolysis of methyl mandelate, the activity decreased by 50% using CALB-octyl Sepharose after PEGylation of the aminated enzyme, while using CALB-Eupergit C had no effect. In this last case, enantioselecitvity in this hydrolysis significantly improved after both chemical modifications (from 7.5 to 20), while using CALB-octyl Sepharose almost had no effect.  相似文献   

19.
The stabilization achieved by different immobilization protocols have been compared using three different enzymes (glutaryl acylase (GAC), D-aminoacid oxidase (DAAO), and glucose oxidase (GOX)): adsorption on aminated supports, treatment of this adsorbed enzymes with glutaraldehyde, and immobilization on glutaraldehyde pre-activated supports. In all cases, the treatment of adsorbed enzymes on amino-supports with glutaraldehyde yielded the higher stabilizations: in the case of GOX, a stabilization over 400-fold was achieved. After this treatment, the enzymes could no longer be desorbed from the supports using high ionic strength (suggesting the support-protein reaction). Modification of the enzymes immobilized on supports that did not offer the possibility of react with glutaraldehyde showed the same stability that the non modified preparations demonstrating that the mere chemical modification did not have effect on the enzyme stability. This simple strategy seems to permit very good results in terms of immobilization rate and stability, offering some advantages when compared to the immobilization on glutaraldehyde pre-activated supports.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of various covalent chemical modifications on the transesterification activity and stability of adsorbed lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) was studied in 2-butanone and o-xylene. CALB species modified with either polyethylene glycol 2000 monomethyl ether (MPEG), polyethylene glycol 300 mono-octyl ether (OPEG) or n-octanol (OCT) were used in combination with a hydrophobic (Accurel) and a hydrophilic (Duolite) support. The thermostabilities of adsorbed CALB in both solvents, and that of free CALB in o-xylene were not influenced by the modifications. In contrast, the thermostability of free CALB in 2-butanone decreased 2.5-fold after MPEG modification and increased 1.5-fold after modification with OPEG and n-octanol, compared to that of native CALB. The activities of the native and modified CALB species were up to 9-fold higher after adsorption onto Accurel than those of the corresponding free enzymes. Adsorption of these enzyme species onto Duolite only resulted in a 2- to 3-fold increase in the activity of OPEG- and OCT-modified CALB. The modified CALB species adsorbed onto Accurel show similar or up to 2-fold lower activities than do native adsorbed CALB species, while 1.5- to 6-fold higher activities were found for modified CALB species adsorbed onto Duolite. We propose that hydrophobic modifiers induce conformational changes of CALB during adsorption on a hydrophobic support whereas all three modifiers protect CALB from structural alterations during adsorption onto a hydrophilic support. Received: 18 March 1999 / Received revision: 21 June 1999 / Accepted: 27 June 1999  相似文献   

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