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1.
Enzyme Microb Technol ; 26(8): 568-573, 2000 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10793203

RESUMO

Thermophilic catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (EC 1.13.11.2) from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been immobilized on highly activated glyoxyl agarose beads. The enzyme could be fully immobilized at 4 degrees C and pH 10.05 with a high retention of activity (around 80%). Enzyme immobilized under these conditions showed little increase in thermostability compared with the soluble enzyme, but further incubation of immobilized enzyme at 25 degrees C and pH 10.05 for 3 h before borohydride reduction resulted in conjugates exhibiting a 100-fold increase in stability (c.f. the free enzyme). The stability of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase immobilized under these conditions was essentially independent of protein concentration whereas free enzyme was rapidly inactivated at low protein concentrations. An apparent stabilization factor of over 700-fold was recorded in the comparison of free and immobilized catechol 2,3-dioxygenases at protein concentrations of 10 µg/ml. Immobilization increased the 'optimum temperature' for activity by 20 degrees C, retained activity at substrate concentrations where the soluble enzyme was fully inactivated and enhanced the resistance to inactivation during catalysis. These results suggest that the immobilization of the enzyme under controlled conditions with the generation of multiple covalent links between the enzyme and matrix both stabilized the quaternary structure of the protein and increased the rigidity of the subunit structures.

2.
Enzyme Microb Technol ; 26(7): 509-515, 2000 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10771054

RESUMO

Epoxy supports (Eupergit C) may be very suitable to achieve the multipoint covalent attachment of proteins and enzymes, therefore, to stabilize their three-dimensional structure. To achieve a significant multipoint covalent attachment, the control of the experimental conditions was found to be critical. A three-step immobilization/stabilization procedure is here proposed: 1) the enzyme is firstly covalently immobilized under very mild experimental conditions (e.g. pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C); 2) the already immobilized enzyme is further incubated under more drastic conditions (higher pH values, longer incubation periods, etc.) to "facilitate" the formation of new covalent linkages between the immobilized enzyme molecule and the support; 3) the remaining groups of the support are blocked to stop any additional interaction between the enzyme and the support. Progressive establishment of new enzyme-support attachments was showed by the progressive irreversible covalent immobilization of several subunits of multi-subunits proteins (all non-covalent structures contained in crude extracts of different microorganism, penicillin G acylase and chymotrypsin). This multipoint covalent attachment enabled the significant thermostabilization of two relevant enzymes, (compared with the just immobilized derivatives): chymotrypsin (5-fold factor) and penicillin G acylase (18-fold factor). Bearing in mind that this stabilization was additive to that achieved by conventional immobilization, the final stabilization factor become 100-fold comparing soluble penicillin G acylase and optimal derivative. These stabilizations were observed also when the inactivations were promoted by the enzyme exposure to drastic pH values or the presence of cosolvents.

3.
Biotechnol Bioeng ; 58(5): 486-93, 1998 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10099284

RESUMO

A number of bacterial lipases can be immobilized in a rapid and strong fashion on octyl-agarose gels (e.g., lipases from Candida antarctica, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Rhizomucor miehei, Humicola lanuginosa, Mucor javanicus, and Rhizopus niveus). Adsorption rates in absence of ammonium sulfate are higher than in its presence, opposite to the observation for typical hydrophobic adsorption of proteins. At 10 mM phosphate, adsorption of lipases is fairly selective allowing enzyme purification associated with their reversible immobilization. Interestingly, these immobilized lipase molecules show a dramatic hyperactivation. For example, lipases from R. niveus, M. miehei, and H. lanuginosa were 6-, 7-, and 20-fold more active than the corresponding soluble enzymes when catalyzing the hydrolysis of a fully soluble substrate (0.4 mM p-nitrophenyl propionate). Even higher hyperactivations and interesting changes in stereospecificity were also observed for the hydrolysis of larger soluble chiral esters (e.g. (R,S)-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutanoic ethyl ester). These results suggest that lipases recognize these "well-defined" hydrophobic supports as solid interfaces and they become adsorbed through the external areas of the large hydrophobic active centers of their "open and hyperactivated structure". This selective interfacial adsorption of lipases becomes a very promising immobilization method with general application for most lipases. Through this method, we are able to combine, via a single and easily performed adsorption step, the purification, the strong immobilization, and a dramatic hyperactivation of lipases acting in the absence of additional interfaces, (e.g., in aqueous medium with soluble substrate). Copyright 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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