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1.
An intracellular nitrilase was purified from a Fusarium solani O1 culture, in which the enzyme (up to 3000 U L−1) was induced by 2-cyanopyridine. SDS-PAGE revealed one major band corresponding to a molecular weight of approximately 40 kDa. Peptide mass fingerprinting suggested a high similarity of the protein with the putative nitrilase from Gibberella moniliformis. Electron microscopy revealed that the enzyme molecules associated into extended rods. The enzyme showed high specific activities towards benzonitrile (156 U mg−1) and 4-cyanopyridine (203 U mg−1). Other aromatic nitriles (3-chlorobenzonitrile, 3-hydroxybenzonitrile) also served as good substrates for the enzyme. The rates of hydrolysis of aliphatic nitriles (methacrylonitrile, propionitrile, butyronitrile, valeronitrile) were 14–26% of that of benzonitrile. The nitrilase was active within pH 5–10 and at up to 50 °C with optima at pH 8.0 and 40–45 °C. Its activity was strongly inhibited by Hg2+ and Ag+ ions. More than half of the enzyme activity was preserved at up to 50% of n-hexane or n-heptane or at up to 15% of xylene or ethanol. Operational stability of the enzyme was examined by the conversion of 45 mM 4-cyanopyridine in a continuous and stirred ultrafiltration-membrane reactor. The nitrilase half-life was 277 and 10.5 h at 35 and 45 °C, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
The nitrile hydratase (NHase, EC 3.5.5.1) activity of Rhodococcus rhodochrous PA-34 was explored for the conversion of 3-cyanopyridine to nicotinamide. The NHase activity (∼18 U/mg dry cell weight, dcw) was observed in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 8.0 containing 1M 3-cyanopyridine as substrate, and 0.75 mg of resting cells (dry cell weight) per ml reaction mixture at 40°C. However, 25°C was more suitable for prolonged batch reaction at high substrate (3-cyanopyridine) concentration. In a batch reaction (1 liter), 7M 3-cyanopyridine (729 g) was completely converted to nicotinamide (855 g) in 12h at 25°C using 9.0 g resting cells (dry cell weight) of R. rhodochrous PA-34.  相似文献   

3.
Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165, a nitrile-transforming organism was isolated from temperate forest soil of Himalayas. The nitrilase (EC 3.5.5.2) activity of this organism had higher substrate specificity toward aromatic nitriles (benzonitrile, 3-cyanopyridine and 4-cyanopyridine) and unsaturated aliphatic nitrile (acrylonitrile) in comparison to saturated aliphatic nitriles (acetonitrile, propionitrile, butyronitrile and isobutyronitrile) nitrile and arylacetonitrile (phenylacetonitrile and indole-3-acetonitrile). The nitrilase of Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165 was inducible in nature and propionitrile proved to be an efficient inducer. However, the salts of ferrous and cobalt ions had an inhibitory effect. Under optimized reaction conditions (pH 8.0 and temperature 45°C) the nitrilase activity of this organism was 2.39 ± 0.07 U/mg dry cell mass (dcm). The half-life of this enzyme was 150 min and 40 min at 45°C and 50°C respectively. However, it was quite stable at 40°C and around 58 % activity was retained even after 6 h at this temperature. The V max and K m value of this nitrilase were 1.67 μmol/ml min and 0.1 M respectively using 3-cyanopyridine as substrate. However, the decrease in V max and K m values (0.56 μmol/ml min and 0.02 M, respectively) were ␣observed at >0.05 M 3-cyanopyridine which revealed that this enzyme experienced uncompetitive inhibition at higher substrate concentrations. Under optimized reaction conditions, 1.6 M 3-cyanopyridine was successfully converted in to nicotinic acid using 2.0 mg resting cells (dcm)/ml reaction mixture in 11 h. This is the highest production of nicotinic acid i.e. 8.95 mg/mg resting cells (dcm)/h as compared to nitrilase systems reported hitherto.  相似文献   

4.
Pea hulls contained 925 mg/g sugar including 659 mg/g cellulosic glucose and 90 mg/g uronic acid. They were de-esterified by NaOH (pH>13 at 4°C, 2 h) and treated with HCl (0.1 mol/l, 80°C, 24 h). The HCl-soluble fraction represented 95 mg/g initial pea hulls. It was rich in galacturonic acid (259 mg/g), xylose (93 mg/g) and rhamnose (91 mg/g), which co-eluted in anion-exchange chromatography. The HCl-soluble fraction was degraded by a rhamnogalacturonan-hydrolase and the reaction products were fractionated by size-exclusion chromatography. Two fractions, representing together 18 mg/g initial pea hulls, were composed almost exclusively of galacturonic acid and xylose and could be defined as xylogalacturonans. The first fraction exhibited a high molar mass, a molar ratio Xyl/GalA of 1 and contained almost 5% of rhamnose. The molar mass of the second fraction was much lower and the molar ratio Xyl/GalA was 0.6. Methylation analysis showed the presence in both fractions of a (1→4) galacturonan backbone highly substituted on O-3 either by terminal xylosyl residues or by short side-chains of (1→2) linked xylosyl residues.  相似文献   

5.
The use of immobilized lipase from Candida antarctica (Novozym(?) 435) to catalyze acetylation of trans-3,5,4'-trihydroxystilbene was investigated in this study. Response surface methodology and 5-level-4-factor central composite rotatable design were adopted to evaluate the effects of synthesis variables, including reaction time (24-72 h), temperature (25-65 °C), substrate molar ratio (1:15-1:75), and enzyme amount (600-3,000 PLU) on the percentage molar conversion of trans-4'-O-acetyl-3,5-dihydroxystilbene. The results showed that reaction temperature and enzyme amount were the most important parameters on percentage molar conversion. Based on ridge max analysis, the optimum conditions for synthesis were: reaction time 60 h, reaction temperature 64 °C, substrate molar ratio 1:56 and enzyme amount 2,293 PLU. The molar conversion of actual experimental values was 95% under optimal conditions. The synthesis product was analyzed using HPLC, mass and NMR. The results revealed that the major product was trans-4'-O-acetyl-3,5-dihydroxystilbene. The reaction kinetics was found to follow the Ping-Pong mechanism; substrate inhibition was not found at high vinyl acetate concentration.  相似文献   

6.
A nitrilase from Aspergillus niger and an amidase from Rhodococcus erythropolis co-immobilized on a 1-mL Butyl Sepharose column were used for the hydrolysis of 4-cyanopyridine into isonicotinic acid. The former enzyme converted the nitrile into the acid:amide mixture (molar ratio ca. 3:1), while the latter enzyme hydrolyzed the amide by-product. Therefore, the ratio of amide in the total product decreased to about 5%. Sodium sulfate was used as a component of the elution buffer, as the commonly used ammonium sulfate (0.8 M) acted as an amidase inhibitor. The hydrolysis of 4-cyanopyridine by a nitrilase from F. solani gave isonicotinic acid and isonicotinamide at a molar ratio of about 98:2. When using this enzyme and the amidase immobilized on two columns operated in tandem, the percentage of isonicotinamide in total product decreased to <0.2%.  相似文献   

7.
Extracellular lipase from Bacillus coagulans BTS-3 was immobilized on (3 Å × 1.5 mm) molecular sieve. The molecular sieve showed approximately 68.48% binding efficiency for lipase (specific activity 55 IU mg?1). The immobilized enzyme achieved approx 90% conversion of acetic acid and 4-nitrophenol (100 mM each) into 4-nitrophenyl acetate in n-heptane at 65°C in 3 h. When alkane of C-chain length other than n-heptane was used as the organic solvent, the conversion of 4-nitrophenol and acetic acid was found to decrease. About 88.6% conversion of the reactants into ester was achieved when reactants were used at molar ratio of 1:1. The immobilized lipase brought about conversion of approximately 58% for esterification of 4-nitrophenol and acetic acid into 4-nitrophenyl acetate at a temperature of 65°C after reuse for 5 cycles.  相似文献   

8.
Response surface methodology (RSM) and five-level, five-variable central composite rotatable design (CCRD) were used to evaluate the effects of synthetic variables, such as reaction time (1-9 h), temperature (25-65 degrees C), enzyme amount (10-50%), substrate molar ratio of geraniol to tributyrin (1:0.33-1:1), and added water amount (0-20%) on molar percent yield of geranyl butyrate, using lipase AY from Candida rugosa. Reaction time and temperature were the most important variables and substrate molar ratio had no effect on percent molar conversion. Based on contour plots, optimum conditions were: reaction time 9 h, temperature 35 degrees C, enzyme amount 50%, substrate molar ratio 1:0.33, and added water 10%. The predicted value was 100% and actual experimental value was 96.8% molar conversion. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Lipase-catalyzed caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) synthesis in ionic liquid, 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis[(trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl]imide ([Emim][Tf2N]), was investigated in this study. The effects of several reaction conditions, including reaction time, reaction temperature, substrate molar ratio of phenethyl alcohol to caffeic acid (CA), and weight ratio of enzyme to CA, on CAPE yield were examined. In a single parameter study, the highest CAPE yield in [Emim][Tf2N] was obtained at 70 °C with a substrate molar ratio of 30:1 and weight ratio of enzyme to CA of 15:1. Based on these results, response surface methodology (RSM) with a 3-level-4-factor central composite rotatable design (CCRD) was adopted to evaluate enzymatic synthesis of CAPE in [Emim][Tf2N]. The four major factors were reaction time (36–60 h), reaction temperature (65–75 °C), substrate molar ratio of phenethyl alcohol to CA (20:1–40:1), and weight ratio of enzyme to CA (10:1–20:1). A quadratic equation model was used to analyze the experimental data at a 95 % confidence level (p < 0.05). A maximum conversion yield of 99.8 % was obtained under the optimized reaction conditions [60 h, 73.7 °C, substrate molar ratio of phenethyl alcohol to CA (27.1:1), and weight ratio of enzyme to CA (17.8:1)] established by our statistical method, whereas the experimental conversion yield was 96.6 ± 2 %.  相似文献   

10.
The synthesis of wax ester using refined, bleached and deodorized (RBD) palm oil and oleyl alcohol catalyzed by lipozyme IM was carried out. Response surface methodology (RSM) based on a five-level, four-variable central composite rotatable design (CCRD) was used to evaluate the interactive effects of synthesis, of reaction time (2.5–10 h), temperature (30–70 °C), amount of enzyme (0.1–0.2 g) and substrate molar ratio (palm oil to oleyl alcohol, 1:1–1:5) on the percentage yield of wax esters. The optimum conditions derived via RSM were: reaction time 7.38 h, temperature 53.9 °C, amount of enzyme 0.149 g, and substrate molar ratio 1:3.41. The actual experimental yield was 84.6% under optimum condition, which compared well to the maximum predicted value of 85.4%.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrilases have long been considered as an attractive alternative to chemical catalyst in carboxylic acids biosynthesis due to their green characteristics and the catalytic potential in nitrile hydrolysis. A novel nitrilase from Pseudomonas putida CGMCC3830 was purified to homogeneity. pI value was estimated to be 5.2 through two-dimensional electrophoresis. The amino acid sequence of NH2 terminus was determined. Nitrilase gene was cloned through CODEHOP PCR, Degenerate PCR and TAIL-PCR. The open reading frame consisted of 1113 bp encoding a protein of 370 amino acids. The predicted amino acid sequence showed the highest identity (61.6%) to nitrilase from Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1. The enzyme was highly specific toward aromatic nitriles such as 3-cyanopyridine, 4-cyanopyridine, and 2-chloro-4-cyanopyridine. It was classified as aromatic nitrilase. The nitrilase activity could reach up to 71.8 U/mg with 3-cyanopyridine as substrate, which was a prominent level among identified cyanopyridine converting enzymes. The kinetic parameters Km and Vmax for 3-cyanopyridine were 27.9 mM and 84.0 U/mg, respectively. These data would warrant it as a novel and potential candidate for creating effective nitrilases in catalytic applications of carboxylic acids synthesis through further protein engineering.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, benzyl benzoate was successfully synthesized via enzymatic acylation using three immobilized enzymes as biocatalysts. Different acyl donors (benzoic acid and benzoic anhydride), operation regimes (batch, fed-batch), mixing modes (conventional mechanical stirring and ultrasound), process parameters (temperature, substrate molar ratio of acyl donor to acyl acceptor), presence or absence of solvents, enzyme amount and type were evaluated. Benzoic acid is a solid that is difficult to solubilize and, thus, was not efficient as acyl donor for the synthesis of benzyl benzoate. On the other hand, benzoic anhydride was very effective for the acylation of benzyl benzoate, and the presence of an excess of benzyl alcohol was essential to ensure the solute-solvent intermolecular attractions and good substrate solubilization, allowing the ester synthesis to be performed in the absence of organic solvents. The ultrasound was effective in increasing increase the initial reaction rate and the final conversion (88 %). However, the Lipozyme TL-IM and RM-IM supports were damaged, and the reuse was unfeasible. The batch and fed-batch approaches in conventional stirring ensured high conversions of 92 and 90 %, respectively, for batch (anhydride: alcohol 1:6) and fed-batch (1:3) using the Lipozyme TL-IM as biocatalyst. The controlled addition of the anhydride (fed-batch) allowed the reduction of alcohol molar ratio but decreased the reaction rates, and the maximum conversions were reached only after 24 h, while the batch approach had 92 % of conversion after 6 h. The yield of benzyl benzoate was high at 6 wt.% of enzyme, low temperature (50 °C), and simple reactor operation (batch). Results show the feasibility of the synthesis of benzyl benzoate via acylation using a green process that may be an alternative route to the chemical synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
Acylation reactions of naringin with palmitic acid were performed by a lipase after formation of highly concentrated homogeneous solutions. Their initial naringin concentration was 840–950 mM, which is 20–60 times greater than that in organic solvent media. The overall productivity of highly concentrated solutions was more than 15 times greater than those of organic phase media. The addition of DMSO (20–40%, w/w) to substrate mixtures lowered the melting temperature of a naringin–palmitic acid mixture (1:1 molar ratio) to about 40 °C. Reactions at 80 °C apparently followed Michaelis–Menten kinetics despite extremely high substrate concentrations. As the temperature increased from 60 °C to 80 °C, the apparent viscosity of the highly concentrated solution decreased remarkably from 4.31 Pa s to 0.063 Pa s. An activation energy of 7.65 kcal/mol obtained in a range of 60–75 °C suggests a diffusion-control. On the other hand, an activation energy of 17.09 kcal/mol in a range of 75–90 °C indicates a reaction-control. The highest product conversion yield of 33% (mol/mol) was obtained in a 10 h reaction at 80 °C. Addition of activated molecular sieves to the highly concentrated solution increased the product conversion yield by 7% (mol/mol), suggesting that the original equilibrium was disrupted by removing water and then a new equilibrium was reached.  相似文献   

14.
The ability of Trichoderma reesei xylanase II (EC 3.2.1.8) to hydrolyse the small xylo-oligomer substrates, xylotetraose and xylobiose, was studied. Xylanase was used in both soluble and cross-linked enzyme crystal (CLEC) form. Hydrolysis reactions with crystalline xylanase cross-linked with glutaraldehyde and lysine were performed in a column reactor. By using appropriate combination of column packing length and flow rate, xylotetraose and xylobiose (initial concentrations 10 mg ml &#109 1 ) were hydrolysed completely to xylose in less than 1 h. The observed reaction rate in the column depended substantially on the flow rate of the eluent, probably due to an enhanced mass-transfer with higher flow rates. With soluble xylanase, using extended reaction times of 24 h and extremely high enzyme/substrate ratios of 20 (w/w) or above, the hydrolysis reaction reached completion with both xylotetraose and xylobiose as substrates. Even with the lowest flow rate, the reaction in the column appeared to be faster than soluble enzyme hydrolysis with comparable enzyme/substrate ratios.  相似文献   

15.
Sialidase in Cerebellar Granule Cells Differentiating in Culture   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The optimal conditions for the assay of sialidase in cerebellar granule cells cultivated in vitro, established using [3H]GD1a and 2'-(4-methylumbelliferyl)-alpha-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (MUB-NeuNAc) as substrates, were the following: pH optimum for both substrates, 3.9; optimal molarity of sodium acetate/acetic acid buffer, 0.05 M with [3H]GD1a and 0.1 M for MUB-NeuNAc; substrate concentration for apparent maximal activity, 0.5 mM for MUB-NeuNAc and 0.1 mM for [3H]GD1a; enzyme activity linear with time up to 30 min with MUB-NeuNAc and up to 90 min with [3H]GD1a; and enzyme activity linear with enzyme protein content up to 80 micrograms with MUB-NeuNAc and up to 20 micrograms with [3H]GD1a. The assay with [3H]GD1a required the presence of Triton X-100 in a molar ratio to GD1a of 15:1. Poly-L-lysine, which was used for plating the cells, was capable of decreasing sialidase activity against [3H]GD1a/Triton X-100 when added to the incubation mixture. However, it had no effect on the enzyme working on MUB-NeuNAc. Using no more than 20 micrograms of cellular protein, the contamination, if any, by poly-L-lysine released from the dish was below the concentration limit exhibiting inhibition. Using the above optimal conditions, sialidase activity was measured during cerebellar granule cell differentiation in culture. From day 0 to day 7-8 in culture, the enzyme activity rose from 20 to 130 nmol of product released/h/mg of protein with MUB-NeuNAc and from 1 to 100 nmol of product released/h/mg of protein with [3H]GD1a.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Summary 3-cyanopyridine was hydrated to nicotinamide by whole cells ofBrevibacterium R-312 containing nitrile hydratase. Cells used for kinetic studies had an initial activity of 0.30 mg nicotinamide/mg cells(dry)-min and storage half-lives (pH 8) of approximately 100 days, 10 days, 5 days and less than 1 day at 4°C, 10°C, 25°C, and 30°C respectively. Temperature and pH maxima were 35°C and 8.0, respectively. Fermentations gave a maximum total hydratase activity of 1.25 mg nicotinamide/min, but at this maximum the amidase activity was unacceptably high (25% of the hydratase activity): nicotinamide was converted too rapidly to nicotinic acid. But systematic fermentation studies (7 1) showed that harvesting at mid-log phase (18–20 h) prior to the attainment of maximum total activity gave reasonably high levels of hydratase (0.3 mg nicotinamide/mg cells-min) and acceptable levels of amidase (0.03 mg nicotinic acid/mg cells-min).  相似文献   

17.
The ability of Trichoderma reesei xylanase II (EC 3.2.1.8) to hydrolyse the small xylo-oligomer substrates, xylotetraose and xylobiose, was studied. Xylanase was used in both soluble and cross-linked enzyme crystal (CLEC) form. Hydrolysis reactions with crystalline xylanase cross-linked with glutaraldehyde and lysine were performed in a column reactor. By using appropriate combination of column packing length and flow rate, xylotetraose and xylobiose (initial concentrations 10 mg ml -1 ) were hydrolysed completely to xylose in less than 1 h. The observed reaction rate in the column depended substantially on the flow rate of the eluent, probably due to an enhanced mass-transfer with higher flow rates. With soluble xylanase, using extended reaction times of 24 h and extremely high enzyme/substrate ratios of 20 (w/w) or above, the hydrolysis reaction reached completion with both xylotetraose and xylobiose as substrates. Even with the lowest flow rate, the reaction in the column appeared to be faster than soluble enzyme hydrolysis with comparable enzyme/substrate ratios.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrilases from Aspergillus niger CBS 513.88, A. niger K10, Gibberella moniliformis, Neurospora crassa OR74A, and Penicillium marneffei ATCC 18224 were expressed in Escherichia coli BL21-Gold (DE3) after IPTG induction. N. crassa nitrilase exhibited the highest yield of 69,000 U L(-1) culture. Co-expression of chaperones (GroEL/ES in G. moniliformis and P. marneffei; GroEL/ES and trigger factor in N. crassa and A. niger CBS 513.88) enhanced the enzyme solubility. Specific activities of strains expressing the former two enzymes increased approximately fourfold upon co-expression of GroEL/ES. The enzyme from G. moniliformis (co-purified with GroEL) preferred benzonitrile as substrate (K(m) of 0.41 mM, V(max) of 9.7 μmol min(-1) mg(-1) protein). The P. marneffei enzyme (unstable in its purified state) exhibited the highest V(max) of 7.3 μmol min(-1) mg(-1) protein in cell-free extract, but also a high K(m) of 15.4 mM, for 4-cyanopyridine. The purified nitrilases from A. niger CBS 513.88 and N. crassa acted preferentially on phenylacetonitrile (K(m) of 3.4 and 2.0 mM, respectively; V(max) of 10.6 and 17.5 μmol min(-1) mg(-1) protein, respectively), and hydrolyzed also (R,S)-mandelonitrile with higher K(m) values. Significant amounts of amides were only formed by the G. moniliformis nitrilase from phenylacetonitrile and 4-cyanopyridine.  相似文献   

19.

A novel aliphatic nitrilase, REH16, was found in Ralstonia eutropha H16 and overexpressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), and its enzymatic properties were studied. The temperature and pH optima were 37 °C and 6.6, respectively, and the best thermostability of the nitrilase was observed at 25 °C, which preserved 95% of activity after 120 h of incubation. REH16 has a broad hydrolytic activity toward aliphatic and heterocyclic nitriles and showed high tolerance of 3-cyanopyridine; this enzyme could hydrolyze as high as 100 mM 3-cyanopyridine completely. To improve the 3-cyanopyridine conversion efficiency in an aqueous reaction system, water-miscible organic solvents were tested, and ethanol (10% v/v) was chosen as the optimal co-solvent. Finally, under optimized conditions, using the fed-batch reaction mode, total of 1050 mM 3-cyanopyridine was hydrolyzed completely in 20.8 h with eight substrate feedings, yielding 129.2 g/L production of nicotinic acid and thus showing a potential for industrial application.

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20.
This work investigated the influence of temperature, enzyme concentration, substrates molar ratio, in the absence and presence of organic solvent, at two molar ratios of the substrates on the enzymatic production of linalil esters using the immobilized lipase Novozym 435 as catalyst, different acids and linalool and Ho-Sho essential oil as substrates. The best reaction conversion was obtained at the highest temperature (70 °C), for both solvent free (3.81%) and with solvent addition (2.25%), for a solvent to substrates molar ratio of 2:1, enzyme concentration of 5 wt% and acid to alcohol molar ratio of 1:1. The reaction kinetics revealed that Ho-Sho essential oil afforded the greatest conversions when compared with pure linalool. Higher linalil esters production were achieved after 10 h reaction (5.58%) in 2:1 solvent to substrates molar ratio, with enzyme concentration of 5 wt%, at 70 °C and anhydride to alcohol molar ratio of 1:1 using Ho-Sho essential oil as substrate.  相似文献   

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