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Reactivation of covalently immobilized lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus
Authors:Rafael C. Rodrigues  Cesar A. Godoy  Marco Filice  Juan M. Bolivar  Armand Palau-Ors  Jesus M. Garcia-Vargas  Oscar Romero  Lorena Wilson  Marco A.Z. Ayub  Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente  Jose M. Guisan
Affiliation:1. Departamento de Biocatálisis, Instituto de Catálisis-CSIC, Campus UAM, Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain;2. Food Science and Technology Institute, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul State, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, P.O. Box 15090, ZC 91501-970 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil;3. School of Biochemical Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, P.O. Box 4059, Valparaíso, Chile
Abstract:Lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) immobilized on cyanogen bromide agarose (CNBr) may be fully inactivated when incubated in saturated solutions of guanidine. When this inactivated enzyme is re-incubated in aqueous medium, 20% of the activity may be recovered for several cycles. However, if the activity was determined in the presence of a detergent (CTAB, an activator of this enzyme), 100% of the initial activity in the presence of detergent was recovered. The enzyme was also inactivated in the presence of organic solvents and at high temperatures. Inactivations were more rapid when the activity was determined in absence of detergent. In both cases, some activity could be recovered just by incubation under mild conditions, and this increase was higher if the activity measurements were performed in the presence of CTAB. These results suggested that the opening of the lipase could be a critical step in the inactivation or reactivation of immobilized TLL. In inactivations in the presence of solvents, 100% of activity could be recovered during several cycles, while in thermal inactivations, the recovered activity decreased in each inactivation–reactivation cycle. The incubation of the enzyme inactivated by temperature in guanidine improved the results, but still 100% could not be achieved during several cycles even measured in the presence of CTAB.Thus, the simple incubation of the partially or fully inactivated enzyme under mild conditions permitted to recover some activity (enhancing the half life of the biocatalysts), even in thermal inactivations.
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