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1.
Immobilization of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) from Horse Liver inside porous supports promotes a dramatic stabilization of the enzyme against inactivation by air bubbles in stirred tank reactors. Moreover, immobilization of ADH on glyoxyl-agarose promotes additional stabilization against any distorting agent (pH, temperature, organic solvents, etc.). Stabilization is higher when using highly activated supports, they are able to immobilize both subunits of the enzyme. The best glyoxyl derivatives are much more stable than conventional ADH derivatives (e.g., immobilized on BrCN activated agarose). For example, glyoxyl immobilized ADH preserved full activity after incubation at pH 5.0 for 20h at room temperature and conventional derivatives (as well as the soluble enzyme) preserved less than 50% of activity after incubation under the same conditions. Moreover, glyoxyl derivatives are more than 10 times more stable than BrCN derivatives when incubated in 50% acetone at pH 7.0. Multipoint covalent immobilization, in addition to multisubunit immobilization, seems to play an important stabilizing role against distorting agents. In spite of these interesting stabilization factors, immobilization hardly promotes losses of catalytic activity (keeping values near to 90%). This immobilized preparation is able to keep good activity using dextran-NAD(+). In this way, ADH glyoxyl immobilized preparation seems to be suitable to be used as cofactor-recycling enzyme-system in interesting NAD(+)-mediated oxidation processes, catalyzed by other immobilized dehydrogenases in stirred tank reactors.  相似文献   

2.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(1):107-113
First, the enzyme immobilized on cyanide bromide agarose beads (CNBr) (that did not involve all enzyme subunits in the immobilization) has been crosslinked with aldehyde-dextran. This preparation did not any longer release enzyme subunits and become fully stable at pH 4 and 25 °C.Then, the stabilities of many different enzyme preparations (enzyme immobilized on CNBr, that derivative further crosslinked with aldehyde-dextran, enzyme immobilized on highly activated amino-epoxy supports, GDH immobilized on supports having a few animo groups and many epoxy groups, GDH immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose beads at pH 7, and that preparation further incubated at pH 10, and finally the enzyme immobilized on this support directly at pH 10) were compared at pH 4 and high temperatures, conditions where both dissociation and distortion play a relevant role in the enzyme inactivation. The most stable preparation was that prepared at pH 7 and incubated at pH 10, followed by GDH immobilized on amino and epoxy supports and the third one was the enzyme immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose at pH 10.The incubation of all enzyme preparations in saturated guanidine solutions produced the full inactivation of all enzyme preparations. When not all enzyme subunits were immobilized, activity was not recovered at all. Among the other derivatives, only glyoxyl preparations (the most inert supports and those where a more intense multipoint covalent attachment were expected) gave significant reactivation when re-incubated in aqueous medium. After optimization of the reactivation conditions, the enzyme immobilized at pH 7 and later incubated at pH 10 recovered 100% of the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

3.
Formate dehydrogenase (FDH) is a stable enzyme that may be readily inactivated by the interaction with hydrophobic interfaces (e.g., due to strong stirring). This may be avoided by immobilizing the enzyme on a porous support by any technique. Thus, even if the enzyme is going to be used in an ultra-membrane reactor, the immobilization presents some advantages. Immobilization on supports activated with bromocianogen, polyethylenimine, glutaraldehyde, etc., did not promote any stabilization of the enzyme under thermal inactivation. However, the immobilization of FDH on highly activated glyoxyl agarose has permitted increasing the enzyme stability against any distorting agent: pH, T, organic solvent, etc. The time of support-enzyme reaction, the temperature of immobilization, and the activation of the support need to be optimized to get the optimal stability-activity properties. Optimized biocatalyst retained 50% of the offered activity and became 50 times more stable at high temperature and neutral pH. Moreover, the quaternary structure of this dimeric enzyme becomes stabilized by immobilization under optimized conditions. Thus, at acidic pH (conditions where the subunit dissociation is the first step in the enzyme inactivation), the immobilization of both subunits of the enzyme on glyoxyl-agarose has allowed the enzyme to be stabilized by hundreds of times. Moreover, the optimal temperature of the enzyme has been increased (even by 10 degrees C at pH 4.5). Very interestingly, the activity with NAD(+)-dextran was around 60% of that observed with free cofactor.  相似文献   

4.
In this paper, the stabilization of a lipase from Bacillus thermocatenulatus (BTL2) by a new strategy is described. First, the lipase is selectively adsorbed on hydrophobic supports. Second, the carboxylic residues of the enzyme are modified with ethylenediamine, generating a new enzyme having 4-fold more amino groups than the native enzyme. The chemical amination did not present a significant effect on the enzyme activity and only reduced the enzyme half-life by a 3-4-fold factor in inactivations promoted by heat or organic solvents. Next, the aminated and purified enzyme is desorbed from the support using 0.2% Triton X-100. Then, the aminated enzyme was immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose by multipoint covalent attachment. The immobilized enzyme retained 65% of the starting activity. Because of the lower p K of the new amino groups in the enzyme surface, the immobilization could be performed at pH 9 (while the native enzyme was only immobilized at pH over 10). In fact, the immobilization rate was higher at this pH value for the aminated enzyme than that of the native enzyme at pH 10. The optimal stabilization protocol was the immobilization of aminated BTL2 at pH 9 and the further incubation for 24 h at 25 degrees C and pH 10. This preparation was 5-fold more stable than the optimal BTL2 immobilized on glyoxyl agarose and around 1200-fold more stable than the enzyme immobilized on CNBr and further aminated. The catalytic properties of BTL2 could be greatly modulated by the immobilization protocol. For example, from (R/S)-2- O-butyryl-2-phenylacetic acid, one preparation of BTL2 could be used to produce the S-isomer, while other preparation produced the R-isomer.  相似文献   

5.
This research describes the immobilization on glyoxyl, cyanogen bromide or octyl agarose beads of a purified lipase from Staphylococcus warneri strain EX17 (SWL), and the effect on its properties. The immobilization on glyoxyl-agarose at pH 10 and 25 °C, conditions in which the enzyme is readily inactivated, required the stabilization of the soluble enzyme. This was attained by the addition of 25% glycerol. Using this additive, immobilization on glyoxyl-agarose beads proceeded very quickly with good activity retention around 80%. This was the most stable preparation under thermal inactivation at pH 5, 7 and 9, in the presence of either cosolvents or detergents. This preparation was hyperactivated by concentrations of Triton X-100, which would produce negative effects over enzyme activity when using the other SWL preparations. Immobilized SWL preparations hydrolyzed different chiral esters, such as (±)-methyl mandelate, (±)-2-O-butyryl-2-phenylacetic acid, and (±)-2-hydroxy-4-phenyl-butyric acid ethyl ester, being its specificity depended on the immobilization protocol. The enantiospecificity was also strongly modulated by the immobilization. Thus, using HPBEt as substrate, octyl-SWL exhibited an opposite enantiospecificity to the other two biocatalysts. This preparation was the most enantioselective in the hydrolysis of (±)-2-O-butyryl-2-phenylacetic acid (E = 56.3).  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The immobilization of a glutamate dehydrogenase from Thermus thermophilus (GDH) on glyoxyl agarose beads at pH 7 has permitted to perform the immobilization, purification and stabilization of this interesting enzyme. It was cloned in Escherichia coli and a first thermal shock of the crude preparation destroyed most mesophilic multimeric proteins. Glyoxyl agarose can only immobilize enzymes via a multipoint and simultaneous attachment. Therefore, only proteins having several terminal amino groups in a position that permits their interaction with a flat surface can be immobilized. GDH became rapidly immobilized at pH 7 and its multimeric structure became stabilized as evidenced by SDS-PAGE. This derivative was stable at acidic pH value while the non-stabilized enzyme was very unstable under these conditions due to subunit dissociation. After immobilization, a further incubation at pH 10 improved enzyme stability under any inactivating conditions by increasing the enzyme–support bonds. In fact, GDH immobilized at pH 7 and incubated at pH 10 preserved more activity than GDH directly immobilized at pH 10 (50% versus 15% after 24 h of incubation) and was also more stable (1.5- to 3-fold, depending on the conditions).This method could be extended to any other multimeric enzyme expressed in mesophilic hosts.  相似文献   

8.
Three mutations on the penicillin acylase surface (increasing the number of Lys in a defined area) were performed. They did not alter the enzyme's stability and kinetic properties; however, after immobilization on glyoxyl-agarose, the mutant enzyme showed improved stability under all tested conditions (e.g., pH 2.5 at 4 degrees C, pH 5 at 60 degrees C, pH 7 at 55 degrees C, or 60% dimethylformamide), with stabilization factors ranging from 4 to 11 compared with the native enzyme immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose.  相似文献   

9.
Different immobilized preparations of lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) have been inactivated by exposure to high temperatures, guanidine or 95% of dioxane. The studied preparations were: non-stabilized cyanogen bromide (CNBr-TLL), aminated CNBr-TLL (CNBr-TLL-A), and two stabilized preparations of aminated TLL by immobilization on glyoxyl support, Gx(9/10)-TLL-A (TLL-A immobilized at pH 9 and later incubated at pH 10) or Gx(10)-TLL-A (directly immobilized at pH 10). The reactivation of the partially inactivated immobilized enzymes under mild conditions by incubation in aqueous buffer, allowed recovery of some of the original activity, which was improved when it was pre-incubated in guanidine. Amination produced a fairly negative effect on the reactivation of the enzyme, but the multipoint covalent attachment of this aminated enzyme reversed the effect (e.g., recovered activity increased from 20% for CNBr-TLL to 80% for Gx(9/10)-TLL-A). The negative effect of the amination was clearer when the inactivation was caused by exposure to high temperatures, although the multipoint attachment of aminated enzyme was able to improve the recovered activity. The determination of enzyme activity in the presence of hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide slowed the inactivation rates of all preparations and improved the recovery of activity after incubation under mild conditions, suggesting that the opening mechanism of the lipase could be a critical step in the TLL inactivation/reactivation. The use of multipoint attached TLL preparations did not only improve enzyme stability, but it also increased activity recovery when the preparation was incubated under mild conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Bovine liver catalase was immobilized on different supports. The tetrameric nature of this enzyme was found to cause its rapid inactivation in diluted conditions due to subunit dissociation, a fact that may rule out its industrial use. Multi-subunit immobilization using highly activated glyoxyl agarose was not enough to involve all enzyme subunits. In fact, washing the derivative produced a strong decrease in the enzyme activity. Further cross-linking of previously immobilized enzyme with tailor-made dextran-aldehyde permitted the multimeric structure to be fully stabilized using either multisubunit preparations immobilized onto highly activated glyoxyl-agarose support or one subunit enzymes immobilized onto poorly activated glyoxyl-agarose. The highest stability of the final biocatalyst was observed using the multisubunit immobilized derivative cross-linked with dextran-aldehyde. The optimal derivative retained around 60% of the immobilized activity, did not release any enzyme subunits after boiling in the presence of SDS, and did not lose activity during washing, and its stability did not depend on the dilution. This derivative was used for 10 cycles in the destruction of 10 mM hydrogen peroxide without any decrease in the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

11.
The present work is focused on efficient immobilization of polygalacturonase on polyethylene matrix, followed by its application in apple juice clarification. Immobilization of polygalacturonase on activated polyethylene and its use in apple juice clarification was not reported so far. Aspergillus niger Van Tieghem (MTCC 3323) produced polygalacturonase when grown in modified Riviere's medium containing pectin as single carbon source by fed-batch culture. The enzyme was precipitated with ethanol and purified by gel filtration chromatography (Sephacryl S-100) and immobilized onto glutaraldehyde-activated polyethylene. The method is very simple and time saving for enzyme immobilization. Various characteristics of immobilized enzyme such as optimum reaction temperature and pH, temperature and pH stability, binding kinetics, efficiency of binding, reusability and metal ion effect on immobilized enzymes were evaluated in comparison to the free enzyme. Both the free and immobilized enzyme showed maximum activity at a temperature of 45 degrees C and pH 4.8. Maximum binding efficiency was 38%. The immobilized enzyme was reusable for 3 cycles with 50% loss of activity after the third cycle. Twenty-four U of immobilized enzyme at 45 degrees C and 1 h incubation time increased the transmittance of the apple juice by about 55% at 650 nm. The immobilized enzyme can be of industrial advantage in terms of sturdiness, availability, inertness, low price, reusability and temperature stability.  相似文献   

12.
Alcalase was scarcely immobilized on monoaminoethyl-N-aminoethyl (MANAE)-agarose beads at different pH values (<20% at pH 7). The enzyme did not immobilize on MANAE-agarose activated with glutaraldehyde at high ionic strength, suggesting a low reactivity of the enzyme with the support functionalized in this manner. However, the immobilization is relatively rapid when using low ionic strength and glutaraldehyde activated support. Using these conditions, the enzyme was immobilized at pH 5, 7, and 9, and in all cases, the activity vs. Boc-Ala-ONp decreased to around 50%. However, the activity vs. casein greatly depends on the immobilization pH, while at pH 5 it is also 50%, at pH 7 it is around 200%, and at pH 9 it is around 140%. All immobilized enzymes were significantly stabilized compared to the free enzyme when inactivated at pH 5, 7, or 9. The highest stability was always observed when the enzyme was immobilized at pH 9, and the worst stability occurred when the enzyme was immobilized at pH 5, in agreement with the reactivity of the amino groups of the enzyme. Stabilization was lower for the three preparations when the inactivation was performed at pH 5. Thus, this is a practical example on how the cooperative effect of ion exchange and covalent immobilization may be used to immobilize an enzyme when only one independent cause of immobilization is unable to immobilize the enzyme, while adjusting the immobilization pH leads to very different properties of the final immobilized enzyme preparation. © 2018 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 35: e2768, 2019.  相似文献   

13.
Three mutations on the penicillin acylase surface (increasing the number of Lys in a defined area) were performed. They did not alter the enzyme's stability and kinetic properties; however, after immobilization on glyoxyl-agarose, the mutant enzyme showed improved stability under all tested conditions (e.g., pH 2.5 at 4°C, pH 5 at 60°C, pH 7 at 55°C, or 60% dimethylformamide), with stabilization factors ranging from 4 to 11 compared with the native enzyme immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose.  相似文献   

14.
The extreme thermophilic cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase) from Thermoanaerobacter sp. was covalently attached to Eupergit C. Different immobilization parameters (incubation time, ionic strength, pH, ratio enzyme/support, etc.) were optimized. The maximum yield of bound protein was around 80% (8.1 mg/g support), although the recovery of β-cyclodextrin cyclization activity was not higher than 11%. The catalytic efficiency was lower than 15%. Results were compared with previous studies on covalent immobilization of CGTase.

The enzymatic properties of immobilized CGTase were investigated and compared with those of the soluble enzyme. Soluble and immobilized CGTases showed similar optimum temperature (80–85 °C) and pH (5.5) values, but the pH profile of the immobilized CGTase was broader at higher pH values. The thermoinactivation of the CGTase coupled to Eupergit C was slower than the observed with the native enzyme. The half-life of the immobilized enzyme at 95 °C was five times higher than that of the soluble enzyme. The immobilized CGTase maintained 40% of its initial activity after 10 cycles of 24 h each. After immobilization, the selectivity of CGTase (determined by the ratio CDs/oligosaccharides) was notably shifted towards oligosaccharide production.  相似文献   


15.
Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) has been immobilized on octyl-agarose in two ways: rapidly, in 5 mM sodium phosphate (85% immobilization yield after 30 min), or slowly, in the presence of 30% (v/v) ethanol (40% immobilization yield after 30 min). Both biocatalysts were treated with glutaraldehyde in order to obtain different modification degrees on their amino groups (25, 50 and 100% modification). SDS-PAGE and detergent desorption experiments showed that, when the immobilization was performed in absence of ethanol, very large aggregates were formed by intermolecular crosslinking, while when 30% ethanol was added during immobilization, almost 90% of the enzyme remained as a monomer. The stability of both derivatives improved upon modification, both in thermal inactivation experiments (at pHs 5, 7 and 9) or in the presence of 50% (v/v) dimethylsulfoxide, achieving stabilization values ranging between 5 and 20 depending on the inactivation conditions. The stability increased proportionally with the modification degree, and was also higher when intermolecular bonds were performed (by a 2–4 factor). Moreover, the activity/pH profile was completely altered after enzyme modification, and, under certain conditions, the activity of the modified biocatalysts doubled that of the non-modified immobilized CALB. Results show that the addition of ethanol permits to have a distance between enzyme molecules that did not allow intermolecular crosslinking, and this has permitted to distinguish between the effects of intramolecular glutaraldehyde modifications and intermolecular glutaraldehyde crosslinking. The simple and controlled treatment of CALB-octyl with glutaraldehyde has proved to be an effective way to obtain a biocatalyst with improved activity and stability under different conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Partially purified flounder muscle (Pseudopleuronectus americanus) glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase was immobilized on cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose. The catalytic properties of the immobilized preparation were studied to determine if immobilization alters the kinetic properties of the native holoenzyme. The results indicate that the pH activity profile of immobilized glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase did not differ from that of the native enzyme. The Michaelis constants (Km) for NAD and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate were somewhat altered. The enzyme stability toward various inactivation treatments in the presence and absence of NAD was characterized and compared to that of he native enzyme. When either form of the enzyme was incubated with urea at concentrations greater than 2m, inactivation occurred very rapidly. Incubation in 0.1% trypsin for 60 minutes decreased the activity of immobilized glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase by 45% and of the native soluble enzyme by 70%. The immobilized enzyme also exhibited considerably more stability than the native soluble enzyme when exposed to a temperature of 50° or to 20 mm ATP. In all cases NAD either greatly reduced the rate of inactivation or completely protected the enzyme from inactivation.  相似文献   

17.
Porcine pepsin was immobilized by chemical aggregation using glutaraldehyde as a bifunctional crosslinking agent. The immobilzed pepsin followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics (K(m) = 5.3 x 10(-5) M) and the yield of immobilization was 91%. The activation energy of the immobilized preparation was 90,613 cal/mol as compared to 67,532 cal/mol for native pepsin. Using acid-denatured hemoglobin and N-acetyl phenyl-alanyl-3, 5-diiodotyrosine (APDT) as substrates, the activities shown by the immobilized pepsin were, respectively, 67 and 79% that of the soluble pepsin. The immobiized pepsin showed marked stabilization against pH, temperature, urea, and guanidine hydrochloride. The activity of the immobilized preparation in the presence of urea was greater when hemoglobin was used as the substrate than when APDT was used as substrate. Storage of the preparation under refrigerated conditions for 160 days showed 58% retention in enzyme activity. The immobilized pepsin can be removed from the reaction mixture volume easily, retaining nearly 100% of its activity even after being used in seven consecutive assays.  相似文献   

18.
Use of lectins as ligands for the immobilization and stabilization of glycoenzymes has immense application in enzyme research and industry. But their widespread use could be limited by the high cost of their production. In the present study preparation of a novel and inexpensive lectin support for use in the immobilization of glycoenzymes containing mannose or glucose residues in their carbohydrate moiety has been described. Cajanus cajan lectin (CCL) coupled covalently to cyanogen bromide activated Seralose 4B could readily bind enzymes such as invertase, glucoamylase and glucose oxidase. The immobilized and glutaraldehyde crosslinked preparations of invertase exhibited high resistance to inactivation upon exposure to enhanced temperature, pH, denaturants and proteolysis. Binding of invertase to CCL-Seralose was however found to be readily reversible in the presence of 1.0 M methyl alpha-D mannopyranoside. In a laboratory scale column reactor the CCL-Seralose bound invertase was stable for a month and retained more than 80% of its initial activity even after 60 days of storage at 4 degrees C. CCL-Seralose bound invertase exhibited marked stability towards temperature, pH changes and denaturants suggesting its potential to be used as an excellent support for the immobilization of other glycoenzymes as well.  相似文献   

19.
Using the poly-His-tagged-beta-galactosidase from Thermus sp. strain T2 overexpressed in Escherichia coli (MC1116) as a model enzyme, we have developed a strategy to purify and immobilize proteins in a single step, combining the excellent properties of epoxy groups for enzyme immobilization with the good performance of immobilized metal-chelate affinity chromatography for protein purification. The aforementioned enzyme could not be immobilized onto standard epoxy supports with good yields, and after purification and storage, it exhibited a strong trend to yield very large aggregates as shown by ultracentrifugation experiments. That preparation could not be immobilized in any support, very likely because the pores of the solid became clogged by the large aggregates. These novel epoxy-metal chelate heterofunctional supports contain a low concentration of Co(2+) chelated in IDA groups and a high density of epoxy groups. This enabled the selective adsorption of poly-His-tagged enzymes, and as this adsorption step is necessary for the covalent immobilization procedure, the selective covalent immobilization of the target enzyme could take place. This strategy allowed similar maximum loadings of the target enzyme using either pure or crude preparations of the enzyme. The enzyme derivative presented a very high activity at 70 degrees C (over 1000 IU in the hydrolysis of lactose) and very high stability and stabilization when compared to its soluble counterpart (activity remained unaltered after several days of incubation at 50 degrees C). In fact, this preparation was much more stable than when the same enzyme was immobilized onto standard epoxy Sepabeads.  相似文献   

20.
The preparation of novel immobilized and stabilized derivatives of trypsin is reported here. The new derivatives preserved 80% of the initial catalytic activity toward synthetic substrates [benzoyl-arginine p-nitroanilide (BAPNA)] and were 50,000-fold more thermally stable than the diluted soluble enzyme in the absence of autolysis. Trypsin was immobilized on highly activated glyoxyl-Sepharose following a two-step immobilization strategy: (a) first, a multipoint covalent immobilization at pH 8.5 that only involves low pK(a) amino groups (e.g., those derived from the activation of trypsin from trypsinogen) is performed and (b) next, an additional alkaline incubation at pH 10 is performed to favor an intense, additional multipoint immobilization between the high concentration of proximate aldehyde groups on the support surface and the high pK(a) amino groups at the enzyme surface region that participated in the first immobilization step. Interestingly, the new, highly stable trypsin derivatives were also much more active in the proteolysis of high molecular weight proteins when compared with a nonstabilized derivative prepared on CNBr-activated Sepharose. In fact, all the proteins contained a cheese whey extract had been completely proteolyzed after 6 h at pH 9 and 50°C, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Under these experimental conditions, the immobilized biocatalysts preserve more than 90% of their initial activity after 20 days. Analysis of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the best immobilized trypsin derivative showed a surface region containing two amino terminal groups and five lysine (Lys) residues that may be responsible for this novel and interesting immobilization and stabilization. Moreover, this region is relatively far from the active site of the enzyme, which could explain the good results obtained for the hydrolysis of high-molecular weight proteins.  相似文献   

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