Advances in the Design and Characterization of Heterogeneous Biocatalysts

A special issue of Catalysts (ISSN 2073-4344). This special issue belongs to the section "Biocatalysis".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2020) | Viewed by 52945

Special Issue Editors


E-Mail Website1 Website2
Guest Editor
Department of Chemical Engineering, School of Chemical Sciences, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Interests: heterogeneous biocatalysts; enzyme stabilization; flow microreactor; process intensification

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Guest Editor
Graz University of Technology, Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, Petersgasse 12/I and Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology (acib), Petersgasse 14, 8010 Graz, Austria
Interests: enzymology; biocascades; reaction and protein engineering; green chemistry

E-Mail Website1 Website2 Website3
Guest Editor
Institute of Catalysis and Petrochemistry, Spanish Council for Scientific Research (CSIC), Marie Curie 2, 28049 Madrid, Spain
Interests: protein immobilization; protein engineering; enzyme stabilization; multienzyme systems; cascade reactions
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Heterogeneous biocatalysts are of great relevance in the development of modern (bio)chemical manufacturing processes. Enzyme immobilization has a long-standing tradition, with many successful examples found at both academic and industrial level. The body of knowledge is well-established and there is a broad repertoire of methodologies for immobilization, involving different chemistries and carrier materials. Fueled by the constant discovery of new enzymes/reactivities, new challenges need to be formulated for heterogeneous biocatalysts. The preparation of heterogeneous biocatalysts is not yet ready to solve emerging challenges, such as multimeric complex enzymes, the stabilization for application in nonconventional reaction media, multienzyme reaction systems, nor can it help with integrating catalysts into new reactor configurations. There is a pressing need to develop innovative concepts for the reuse of cofactors and the level of depiction for heterogeneous biocatalysts by structural features or spatiotemporal resolution of local concentration of reactants and products. To this end, a merged strategic research field can be formulated that would possibly be best described by the term “heterogeneous biocatalyst engineering”.

This Special Issue aims at hosting original contributions dealing with advances in the design, application, and characterization of immobilized biocatalysts. The main topics are:

  1. Immobilized new enzymes and biocascades of high synthetic relevance;
  2. New techniques of immobilization dealing with enzyme activity or stability;
  3. New materials for enzyme immobilization;
  4. Immobilized enzymes in new reactor concepts: e.g. flow microreactors, intensifying reactions and reactors...
  5. Advances in the characterization of immobilized enzymes.

Dr. Juan M. Bolivar
Dr. Alexander Dennig
Dr. Javier Rocha-Martin
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • enzyme immobilization
  • enzyme stabilization
  • advanced/biohybrid materials
  • biocatalysis
  • biotechnology
  • green chemistry
  • bioreactor
  • heterogeneous catalysts

Published Papers (14 papers)

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Research

17 pages, 5373 KiB  
Article
Efficient One-Step Immobilization of CaLB Lipase over MOF Support NH2-MIL-53(Al)
by Victoria Gascón-Pérez, Mayra Belen Jiménez, Asunción Molina, Rosa María Blanco and Manuel Sánchez-Sánchez
Catalysts 2020, 10(8), 918; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10080918 - 10 Aug 2020
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 4271
Abstract
Metal-organic framework (MOF) materials possess the widest versatility in structure, composition, and synthesis procedures amongst the known families of materials. On the other hand, the extraordinary affinity between MOFs and enzymes has led to widely investigating these materials as platforms to support these [...] Read more.
Metal-organic framework (MOF) materials possess the widest versatility in structure, composition, and synthesis procedures amongst the known families of materials. On the other hand, the extraordinary affinity between MOFs and enzymes has led to widely investigating these materials as platforms to support these catalytic proteins in recent years. In this work, the MOF material NH2-MIL-53(Al) has been tested as a support to immobilize by one-step methodology (in situ) the enzyme lipase CaLB from Candida antarctica by employing conditions that are compatible with its enzymatic activity (room temperature, aqueous solution, and moderate pH values). Once the nature of the linker deprotonating agent or the synthesis time were optimized, the MOF material resulted in quite efficient entrapping of the lipase CaLB through this in situ approach (>85% of the present enzyme in the synthesis media) while the supported enzyme retained acceptable activity (29% compared to the free enzyme) and had scarce enzyme leaching. The equivalent post-synthetic method led to biocatalysts with lower enzyme loading values. These results make clear that the formation of MOF support in the presence of the enzyme to be immobilized substantially improves the efficiency of the biocatalysts support for retaining the enzyme and limits their leaching. Full article
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22 pages, 2332 KiB  
Article
Composites of Crosslinked Aggregates of Eversa® Transform and Magnetic Nanoparticles. Performance in the Ethanolysis of Soybean Oil
by Letícia Passos Miranda, José Renato Guimarães, Roberto Campos Giordano, Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente and Paulo Waldir Tardioli
Catalysts 2020, 10(8), 817; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10080817 - 22 Jul 2020
Cited by 24 | Viewed by 2238
Abstract
Eversa® Transform 2.0 has been launched to be used in free form, but its immobilization may improve its performance. This work aimed to optimize the immobilization of Eversa® Transform 2.0 by the crosslinked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs) technique, using almost all the [...] Read more.
Eversa® Transform 2.0 has been launched to be used in free form, but its immobilization may improve its performance. This work aimed to optimize the immobilization of Eversa® Transform 2.0 by the crosslinked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs) technique, using almost all the available tools to improve its performance. Several variables in the CLEA preparation were optimized to improve the recovered activity, such as precipitant nature and crosslinker concentration. Moreover, some feeders were co-precipitated to improve the crosslinking step, such as bovine serum albumin, soy protein, or polyethyleneimine. Starch (later enzymatically degraded) was utilized as a porogenic agent to decrease the substrate diffusion limitations. Silica magnetic nanoparticles were also utilized to simplify the CLEA handling, but it was found that a large percentage of the Eversa activity could be immobilized on these nanoparticles before aggregation. The best CLEA protocol gave a 98.9% immobilization yield and 30.1% recovered activity, exhibited a porous structure, and an excellent performance in the transesterification of soybean oil with ethanol: 89.8 wt% of fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) yield after 12 h of reaction, while the free enzyme required a 48 h reaction to give the same yield. A caustic polishing step of the product yielded a biodiesel containing 98.9 wt% of FAEEs and a free fatty acids content lower than 0.25%, thus the final product met the international standards for biodiesel. The immobilized biocatalyst could be reused for at least five 12 h-batches maintaining 89.6% of the first-batch yield, showing the efficient catalyst recovery by applying an external magnetic field. Full article
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10 pages, 826 KiB  
Article
High Stabilization of Enzymes Immobilized on Rigid Hydrophobic Glyoxyl-Supports: Generation of Hydrophilic Environments on Support Surfaces
by Alejandro H. Orrego, María Romero-Fernández, María del Carmen Millán-Linares, Justo Pedroche, José M. Guisán and Javier Rocha-Martin
Catalysts 2020, 10(6), 676; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10060676 - 16 Jun 2020
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 2746
Abstract
Very rigid supports are useful for enzyme immobilization to design continuous flow reactors and/or to work in non-conventional media. Among them, epoxy-methacrylic supports are easily functionalized with glyoxyl groups, which makes them ideal candidates for enzyme stabilization via multipoint covalent immobilization. However, these [...] Read more.
Very rigid supports are useful for enzyme immobilization to design continuous flow reactors and/or to work in non-conventional media. Among them, epoxy-methacrylic supports are easily functionalized with glyoxyl groups, which makes them ideal candidates for enzyme stabilization via multipoint covalent immobilization. However, these supports present highly hydrophobic surfaces, which might promote very undesirable effects on enzyme activity and/or stability. The hydrophilization of the support surface after multipoint enzyme immobilization is proposed here as an alternative to reduce these undesirable effects. The remaining aldehyde groups on the support are modified with aminated hydrophilic small molecules (glycine, lysine or aspartic acid) in the presence of 2-picoline borane. The penicillin G acylase from Escherichia coli (PGA) and alcohol dehydrogenase from Thermus thermophilus HB27 (ADH2) were immobilized on glyoxyl-functionalized agarose, Relizyme and Relisorb. Despite the similar density of aldehyde groups displayed by functionalized supports, their stabilization effects on immobilized enzymes were quite different: up to 300-fold lower by hydrophobic supports than by highly hydrophilic glyoxyl-agarose. A dramatic increase in the protein stabilities was shown when a hydrophilization treatment of the hydrophobic support surface was done. The PGA immobilized on the glyoxyl-Relisorb hydrophilized with aspartic acid becomes 280-fold more stable than without any treatment, and it is even more stable than the PGA immobilized on the glyoxyl agarose. Full article
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15 pages, 2207 KiB  
Article
Stabilization of b-Glucuronidase by Immobilization in Magnetic-Silica Hybrid Supports
by Sonali Correa, Magdalena Ripoll, Erienne Jackson, Valeria Grazú and Lorena Betancor
Catalysts 2020, 10(6), 669; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10060669 - 13 Jun 2020
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3338
Abstract
β-Glucuronidases are a class of enzymes that catalyze the breakdown of complex carbohydrates. They have well documented biocatalytic applications in synthesis, therapeutics, and analytics that could benefit from enzyme immobilization and stabilization. In this work, we have explored a number of immobilization strategies [...] Read more.
β-Glucuronidases are a class of enzymes that catalyze the breakdown of complex carbohydrates. They have well documented biocatalytic applications in synthesis, therapeutics, and analytics that could benefit from enzyme immobilization and stabilization. In this work, we have explored a number of immobilization strategies for Patella vulgata β-Glucuronidase that comprised a tailored combination of biomimetic silica (Si) and magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). The individual effect of each material on the enzyme upon immobilization was first tested. Three different immobilization strategies for covalent attachment on MNPs and different three catalysts for the deposition of Si particles were tested. We produced nine different immobilized preparations and only two of them presented negligible activity. All the preparations were in the micro-sized range (from 1299 ± 52 nm to 2101 ± 67 nm of hydrodynamic diameter). Their values for polydispersity index varied around 0.3, indicating homogeneous populations of particles with low probability of agglomeration. Storage, thermal, and operational stability were superior for the enzyme immobilized in the composite material. At 80 °C different preparations with Si and MNPs retained 40% of their initial activity after 6 h of incubation whereas the soluble enzyme lost 90% of its initial activity within 11 min. Integration of MNPs provided the advantage of reusing the biocatalyst via magnetic separation up to six times with residual activity. The hybrid material produced herein demonstrated its versatility and robustness as a support for β-Glucuronidases immobilization. Full article
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16 pages, 3566 KiB  
Article
Glyoxyl-Activated Agarose as Support for Covalently Link Novo-Pro D: Biocatalysts Performance in the Hydrolysis of Casein
by Laiane Antunes Lopes, Paula Kern Novelli, Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente, Paulo Waldir Tardioli and Raquel Lima Camargo Giordano
Catalysts 2020, 10(5), 466; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10050466 - 25 Apr 2020
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 3043
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a commercial protease (Novo-Pro D (NPD)), both in soluble and immobilized forms, in the hydrolysis of proteins (using casein as model protein). Immobilization of the protease NPD on 6% agarose activated with glyoxyl groups for [...] Read more.
This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a commercial protease (Novo-Pro D (NPD)), both in soluble and immobilized forms, in the hydrolysis of proteins (using casein as model protein). Immobilization of the protease NPD on 6% agarose activated with glyoxyl groups for 24 h at 20 °C and pH 10.0 allowed preparing immobilized biocatalyst with around 90% immobilization yield, 92% recovered activity versus small substrate, and a thermal stability 5.3-fold higher than the dialyzed soluble enzyme at 50 °C and pH 8.0. Immobilization times longer than 24 h lead to a decrease in the recovered activity and did not improve the biocatalyst stability. At 50 °C and pH 6.5, the immobilized NPD was around 20-fold more stable than the dialyzed soluble protease. Versus casein, the immobilized NDP presented a 10% level of activity, but it allowed hydrolyzing casein (26 g/L) at 50 °C and pH 6.5 up to a 40% degree of hydrolysis (DH) after 2 h reaction, while under the same conditions, only a 34% DH was achieved with soluble NPD. In addition, the immobilized NPD showed good reusability, maintaining the DH of casein for at least ten 2h-reaction batches. Full article
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15 pages, 5025 KiB  
Article
Laccase Immobilized Fe3O4-Graphene Oxide Nanobiocatalyst Improves Stability and Immobilization Efficiency in the Green Preparation of Sulfa Drugs
by Shamila Rouhani, Shohreh Azizi, Rose W. Kibechu, Bhekie B Mamba and Titus A. M. Msagati
Catalysts 2020, 10(4), 459; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10040459 - 23 Apr 2020
Cited by 20 | Viewed by 2880
Abstract
This paper, reports on the novel and green synthesis procedure for sulfonamides that involved the immobilization of Trametes Versicolor laccase onto the Fe3O4–graphene nanocomposite via glutaraldehyde (GA) crosslinking (Lac/Fe3O4/GO). Various parameters, mainly, activation time, GA, [...] Read more.
This paper, reports on the novel and green synthesis procedure for sulfonamides that involved the immobilization of Trametes Versicolor laccase onto the Fe3O4–graphene nanocomposite via glutaraldehyde (GA) crosslinking (Lac/Fe3O4/GO). Various parameters, mainly, activation time, GA, and laccase concentration were investigated and optimized. The results showed that the optimal contact time was 4 h, GA concentration was 5% while laccase concentration was 5 mg·mL−1, at which a high enzyme activity recovery was achieved (86%). In terms of the stability of immobilized laccase to temperature and storage conditions, the performance of the nanobiocatalyst was found to significantly exceed that of free laccase. The results have indicated that nearly 70% of relative activity for immobilized laccase remained after the incubation period of 2 h at 55 °C, but only 48% of free laccase remained within the same time period. Moreover, the immobilized laccase retained 88% of its initial activity after storage for 20 days. In case of the free laccase, the activity retained within the same time period was 32%. In addition, the nanobiocatalyst possessed better recycling performance as evidenced from the observation that after eight cycles of repeated use, it retained 85% of its original activity. Full article
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19 pages, 1737 KiB  
Article
Sustainable Enzymatic Synthesis of a Solketal Ester—Process Optimization and Evaluation of Its Antimicrobial Activity
by Patricia A. Mendoza-Ortiz, Rafaela S. Gama, Omar C. Gómez, Jaine H. H. Luiz, Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente, Erika C. Cren and Adriano A. Mendes
Catalysts 2020, 10(2), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10020218 - 11 Feb 2020
Cited by 24 | Viewed by 3474
Abstract
The present study aims the enzymatic synthesis of solketal palmitate by esterification between solketal and palmitic acid using heptane as solvent. Lipases from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL), Candida rugosa type VII (CRL), and Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) were immobilized via interfacial activation on rice husk [...] Read more.
The present study aims the enzymatic synthesis of solketal palmitate by esterification between solketal and palmitic acid using heptane as solvent. Lipases from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL), Candida rugosa type VII (CRL), and Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) were immobilized via interfacial activation on rice husk silica functionalized with triethoxy(octyl)silane (Octyl–SiO2) and used as biocatalysts. A loading of 20–22 mg of lipase/g of support was immobilized independently of the studied enzyme. TLL–Octyl–SiO2 was the most active biocatalyst in oil hydrolysis (656.0 ± 23.9 U/g) and ester synthesis (productivity of 6.8 mmol/min.gbiocat), and it has been chosen for further ester synthesis optimization. The effect of some important parameters such as biocatalyst concentration, reaction temperature and acid:alcohol molar ratio on the reaction has been evaluated using a central composite rotatable design at fixed mechanical stirring (240 rpm) and reaction time (15 min). Subsequently, the effect of reactants concentration and molecular sieve concentration has also been examined. Under optimal conditions (56 °C, acid:alcohol molar ratio of 1:3 with a palmitic acid concentration of 1 M, and 20% wt. of TLL–Octyl–SiO2 per volume of reaction mixture), 83% acid conversion was obtained after 150 min of reaction. The biocatalyst retained 87% of its initial activity after seven successive reaction batches. The product was identified by nuclear magnetic resonance analysis. Antimicrobial activity studies showed that the synthesized ester demonstrated antifungal activity against Candida albicans and Candida parapsilosis, with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) between 200 and 400 µg/mL, and bacteriostatic/fungistatic action—minimum microbicial concentration (MMC) > 400 µg/mL. Full article
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14 pages, 970 KiB  
Article
Estimation of the Effectiveness Factor for Immobilized Enzyme Catalysts through a Simple Conversion Assay
by Pedro Valencia and Francisco Ibañez
Catalysts 2019, 9(11), 930; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9110930 - 07 Nov 2019
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 5816
Abstract
A novel methodology to estimate the effectiveness factor (EF) of an immobilized enzyme catalyst is proposed here. The methodology consists of the determination of the productivity of both the immobilized enzyme catalyst and its corresponding soluble enzyme, plotted as a function of the [...] Read more.
A novel methodology to estimate the effectiveness factor (EF) of an immobilized enzyme catalyst is proposed here. The methodology consists of the determination of the productivity of both the immobilized enzyme catalyst and its corresponding soluble enzyme, plotted as a function of the reaction conversion. The ratio of these productivities corresponds to the EF estimator of the catalyst. Conversion curves were simulated in a batch reactor with immobilized enzyme and soluble enzyme for different values of the S0/KM ratio and Thiele modulus (Φ) to demonstrate this hypothesis. Two different reaction orders were tested: first-order kinetic and Michaelis–Menten-based kinetic with product inhibition. The results showed that the ratio of productivities between the immobilized and soluble enzymes followed the behavior profile presented by the EF with satisfactory agreement. This simple methodology to estimate the EF is based on routine conversion experiments, thus avoiding the exhaustive kinetic and mass transfer characterization of the immobilized enzyme catalyst. Full article
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16 pages, 2380 KiB  
Article
Deciphering the Effect of Microbead Size Distribution on the Kinetics of Heterogeneous Biocatalysts through Single-Particle Analysis Based on Fluorescence Microscopy
by Emilio Muñoz-Morales, Susana Velasco-Lozano, Ana I. Benítez-Mateos, María J. Marín, Pedro Ramos-Cabrer and Fernando López-Gallego
Catalysts 2019, 9(11), 896; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9110896 - 28 Oct 2019
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3381
Abstract
Understanding the functionality of immobilized enzymes with spatiotemporal resolution and under operando conditions is an unmet need in applied biocatalysis, as well as priceless information to guide the optimization of heterogeneous biocatalysts for industrial purposes. Unfortunately, enzyme immobilization still relies on trial-and-error approximations [...] Read more.
Understanding the functionality of immobilized enzymes with spatiotemporal resolution and under operando conditions is an unmet need in applied biocatalysis, as well as priceless information to guide the optimization of heterogeneous biocatalysts for industrial purposes. Unfortunately, enzyme immobilization still relies on trial-and-error approximations that prevail over rational designs. Hence, a modern fabrication process to achieve efficient and robust heterogeneous biocatalysts demands comprehensive characterization techniques to track and understand the immobilization process at the protein–material interface. Recently, our group has developed a new generation of self-sufficient heterogeneous biocatalysts based on alcohol dehydrogenases co-immobilized with nicotinamide cofactors on agarose porous microbeads. Harnessing the autofluorescence of NAD+(P)H and using time-lapse fluorescence microscopy, enzyme activity toward the redox cofactors can be monitored inside the beads. To analyze these data, herein we present an image analytical tool to quantify the apparent Michaelis–Menten parameters of alcohol dehydrogenases co-immobilized with NAD(P)+/H at the single-particle level. Using this tool, we found a strong negative correlation between the apparent catalytic performance of the immobilized enzymes and the bead radius when using exogenous bulky substrates in reduction reactions. Therefore, applying image analytics routines to microscopy studies, we can directly unravel the functional heterogeneity of different heterogeneous biocatalyst samples tested under different reaction conditions. Full article
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16 pages, 1237 KiB  
Article
Identification of a Specific Inhibitor of Human Scp1 Phosphatase Using the Phosphorylation Mimic Phage Display Method
by Takuya Yoshida, Kazuki Yamazaki, Shunta Imai, Akinori Banno, Atsushi Kaneko, Kazuhiro Furukawa and Yoshiro Chuman
Catalysts 2019, 9(10), 842; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9100842 - 11 Oct 2019
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2960
Abstract
Protein phosphatases are divided into tyrosine (Tyr) phosphatases and serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) phosphatases. While substrate trapping mutants are frequently used to identify substrates of Tyr phosphatases, a rapid and simple method to identify Ser/Thr phosphatase substrates is yet to be developed. The TFIIF-associating component [...] Read more.
Protein phosphatases are divided into tyrosine (Tyr) phosphatases and serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) phosphatases. While substrate trapping mutants are frequently used to identify substrates of Tyr phosphatases, a rapid and simple method to identify Ser/Thr phosphatase substrates is yet to be developed. The TFIIF-associating component of RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain (CTD) phosphatase/small CTD phosphatase (FCP/SCP) phosphatase family is one of the three types of Ser/Thr protein phosphatases. Defects in these phosphatases are correlated with the occurrence of various diseases such as cancer and neuropathy. Recently, we developed phosphorylation mimic phage display (PMPD) method with AlF4, a methodology to identify substrates for FCP/SCP type Ser/Thr phosphatase Scp1. Here, we report a PMPD method using BeF3 to identify novel substrate peptides bound to Scp1. After screening peptide phages, we identified peptides that bound to Scp1 in a BeF3-dependent manner. Synthetic phosphopeptide BeM12-1, the sequence of which was isolated at the highest frequency, directly bound to Scp1. The binding was inhibited by adding BeF3, indicating that the peptide binds to the active center of catalytic site in Scp1. The phosphorylated BeM12-1 worked as a competitive inhibitor of Scp1. Thus, PMPD method may be applicable for the identification of novel substrates and inhibitors of the FCP/SCP phosphatase family. Full article
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16 pages, 2615 KiB  
Article
Combi-CLEAs of Glucose Oxidase and Catalase for Conversion of Glucose to Gluconic Acid Eliminating the Hydrogen Peroxide to Maintain Enzyme Activity in a Bubble Column Reactor
by Agnes Cristina Oliveira Mafra, Letícia Gazzotto Ulrich, Jakub F. Kornecki, Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente, Paulo Waldir Tardioli and Marcelo Perencin de Arruda Ribeiro
Catalysts 2019, 9(8), 657; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9080657 - 31 Jul 2019
Cited by 31 | Viewed by 6420
Abstract
In this study combined cross-linked aggregates of catalase from bovine liver and glucose-oxidase from Aspergillus niger were prepared, and the effects of the precipitant and crosslinking agents, as well as the use of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a feeder protein, on enzyme [...] Read more.
In this study combined cross-linked aggregates of catalase from bovine liver and glucose-oxidase from Aspergillus niger were prepared, and the effects of the precipitant and crosslinking agents, as well as the use of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a feeder protein, on enzyme immobilization yield and thermal stability of both enzymes, were evaluated. Combi- crosslinking of enzyme aggregates (CLEAs) prepared using dimethoxyethane as precipitant, 25 mM glutaraldehyde and BSA/enzymes mass ratio of 5.45 (w/w), exhibited the highest enzyme activities and stabilities at 40 °C, pH 6.0, and 250 rpm for 5 h. The stability of both immobilized enzymes was fairly similar, eliminating one of the problems of enzyme coimmobilization. Combi-CLEAs were used in gluconic acid (GA) production in a bubble column reactor operated at 40 °C, pH 6.0 and 10 vvm of aeration, using 26 g L−1 glucose as the substrate. Results showed conversion of around 96% and a reaction course very similar to the same process using free enzymes. The operational half-life was 34 h, determined from kinetic profiles and the first order inactivation model. Combi-CLEAs of glucose-oxidase and catalase were shown to be a robust biocatalyst for applications in the production of gluconic acid from glucose. Full article
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13 pages, 2147 KiB  
Article
Increasing the Enzyme Loading Capacity of Porous Supports by a Layer-by-Layer Immobilization Strategy Using PEI as Glue
by Nathalia S. Rios, Sara Arana-Peña, Carmen Mendez-Sanchez, Yuliya Lokha, Vicente Cortes-Corberan, Luciana R. B. Gonçalves and Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente
Catalysts 2019, 9(7), 576; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9070576 - 29 Jun 2019
Cited by 37 | Viewed by 3982
Abstract
A new strategy to increase the enzyme-loading capacity of porous supports was investigated. Lipase from Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) was immobilized on octyl-agarose (OA) beads and treated with polyethyleneimine (PEI). Then, PFL was immobilized on the previous PFL layer. Next, the biocatalyst was coated [...] Read more.
A new strategy to increase the enzyme-loading capacity of porous supports was investigated. Lipase from Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) was immobilized on octyl-agarose (OA) beads and treated with polyethyleneimine (PEI). Then, PFL was immobilized on the previous PFL layer. Next, the biocatalyst was coated with PEI and a third layer of PFL was added. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide electrophoresis showed that the amount of PFL proportionally increased with each enzyme layer; however, the effects on biocatalyst activity were not as clear. Hydrolyzing 50 mM of triacetin at 25 °C, the activity of the three-layer biocatalyst was even lower than that of the bi-layer one; on the contrary its activity was higher when the activity was measured at 4 °C in the presence of 30% acetonitrile (that reduced the activity and thus the relevance of the substrate diffusion limitations). That is, the advantage of the multilayer formation depends on the specific activity of the enzyme and on the diffusion limitations of the substrate. When octyl agarose (OA)-PFL-PEI-PFL preparation was treated with glutaraldehyde, the activity was reduced, although the enzyme stability increased and the immobilization of the last PFL layer offered results similar to the one obtained using the three-layer preparation without glutaraldehyde modification (90%). Full article
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14 pages, 2454 KiB  
Article
Reuse of Lipase from Pseudomonas fluorescens via Its Step-by-Step Coimmobilization on Glyoxyl-Octyl Agarose Beads with Least Stable Lipases
by Nathalia S. Rios, Sara Arana-Peña, Carmen Mendez-Sanchez, Claudia Ortiz, Luciana R. B. Gonçalves and Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente
Catalysts 2019, 9(5), 487; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9050487 - 27 May 2019
Cited by 35 | Viewed by 4343
Abstract
Coimmobilization of lipases may be interesting in many uses, but this means that the stability of the least stable enzyme determines the stability of the full combilipase. Here, we propose a strategy that permits the reuse the most stable enzyme. Lecitase Ultra (LU) [...] Read more.
Coimmobilization of lipases may be interesting in many uses, but this means that the stability of the least stable enzyme determines the stability of the full combilipase. Here, we propose a strategy that permits the reuse the most stable enzyme. Lecitase Ultra (LU) (a phospholipase) and the lipases from Rhizomucor miehei (RML) and from Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) were immobilized on octyl agarose, and their stabilities were studied under a broad range of conditions. Immobilized PFL was found to be the most stable enzyme under all condition ranges studied. Furthermore, in many cases it maintained full activity, while the other enzymes lost more than 50% of their initial activity. To coimmobilize these enzymes without discarding fully active PFL when LU or RML had been inactivated, PFL was covalently immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose beads. After biocatalysts reduction, the other enzyme was coimmobilized just by interfacial activation. After checking that glyoxyl-octyl-PFL was stable in 4% Triton X-100, the biocatalysts of PFL coimmobilized with LU or RML were submitted to inactivation under different conditions. Then, the inactivated least stable coimmobilized enzyme was desorbed (using 4% detergent) and a new enzyme reloading (using in some instances RML and in some others employing LU) was performed. The initial activity of immobilized PFL was maintained intact for several of these cycles. This shows the great potential of this lipase coimmobilization strategy. Full article
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14 pages, 5525 KiB  
Article
Site-Specific Addressing of Particles and Coatings via Enzyme-Mediated Destabilization
by David Wedegärtner and Oliver I. Strube
Catalysts 2019, 9(4), 354; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9040354 - 12 Apr 2019
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2897
Abstract
Enzyme mediated addressing (EMA) is a highly specific and easy-to-apply technology for direction and deposition of particles and coatings on surfaces. Key feature of this process is an enzymatic reaction in direct proximity to the surface, which induces the deposition. The technique has [...] Read more.
Enzyme mediated addressing (EMA) is a highly specific and easy-to-apply technology for direction and deposition of particles and coatings on surfaces. Key feature of this process is an enzymatic reaction in direct proximity to the surface, which induces the deposition. The technique has previously shown great success in the handling of biological particles. In this study, addressing of non-biological nanoparticles, in particular plastics and metals, is presented. The respective particles are stabilized by an amphiphilic, enzyme-degradable block copolymer, consisting of poly(ethylene glycol) and poly(caprolactone). After contact with the enzyme pseudomonas lipase, the particles are destabilized, due to the loss of the hydrophilic part of the block copolymer. The lipase is therefore immobilized on glass supports. Immobilization is performed via adsorption or covalent bonding to epoxide groups. All deposition experiments show that addressing of individual particles occurs precisely within the predefined areas of enzyme activity. Depending on the material and reaction conditions, intact nanoparticles or coatings from such can be gained. The quintessence of the study is the indifference of the EMA regarding particle materials. From this rationale, the technique offers near unlimited materials compatibility within a precise, easy-to-apply, and upscalable process. Full article
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