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CEN 551 Biochemical Engineering

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CEN 551 Biochemical Engineering Instructor: Dr. Christine Kelly Growing the microorganisms Medium: substance used to grow the microorganisms. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CEN 551 Biochemical Engineering


1
CEN 551Biochemical Engineering
  • Instructor Dr. Christine Kelly

2
(No Transcript)
3
Growing the microorganisms
  • Medium substance used to grow the
    microorganisms. (Media is the plural.)
  • In Class Assignment
  • Form groups (not the same as usual).
  • Write on a piece of paper what components should
    be in a typical microbial growth medium, and
    relative amounts (lots, medium, small, tiny)?

4
Rich and Minimal Media
  • Rich (complex) media yeast extract, corn steep
    liquor, Luria, Bacto. Complex mixtures of
    carbon, nitrogen, viatmins, amino acids, trace
    minerals. Generally unknown concentrations.
  • Minimal (defined) media glucose, ammonium
    sulfate, magnesium chloride, potassium
    hyperchlorate, others in known proportions (often
    have to provide vitamins and minerals metals).

5
Macronutrients
  • Carbon
  • Nitrogen
  • Phosphorous
  • Oxygen
  • Hydrogen
  • Sulfur
  • Magnesium
  • Potassium
  • When in doubt
  • CNP
  • 100101

6
Micronutrients
  • Mo2
  • Zn2
  • Cu2
  • Mn2
  • Ca2
  • Na2
  • Vitamins
  • Growth hormones
  • Metabolic precursers
  • Often a concentrated stock solution of vitamins
    and/or metals is used in growth medium.
  • metal ions in media may require a chelating
    agent to form soluable compounds (ETDA a common
    chelating agent)

7
Classification Scheme
  • Heterotrophs organic compounds as carbon and
    energy source
  • Autotrophs carbon dioxide as carbon source

8
Industrial Sources of Carbon
  • starch waste (potato, corn)
  • molasses (cane and beet)
  • corn sugar, corn steep liquor
  • whey
  • can use pure sugars (glucose, fructose) if
    product is valuable

9
Nitrogen
  • Some organisms fix nitrogen from N2 in the
    atmosphere
  • Most use ammonium salts, proteins, amino acids

10
Industrial Sources of Nitrogen
  • Corn-steep liquor
  • Yeast extract (expensive)
  • Fish meal
  • Dried blood

11
Biotechnology Products
Enzymes are named by adding ase to the end of
the substrate (reactant) or reaction. For
example, urease and alcohol dehydrogenase.
12
Review
Small molecules, proteins, and a ribosome drawn
to scale. Ribosomes are part of the machinery the
cell uses to make proteins each ribosome is
composed of about 90 macromolecules (protein and
RNA molecules).
http//gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/Bio
BookEnzym.html
13
http//gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/Bio
BookEnzym.html
14
Enzyme Function
  • In order to do its work, an enzyme must unite -
    even if ever so briefly - with at least one of
    the reactants. In most cases, the forces that
    hold the enzyme and its substrate are
    noncovalent, an assortment of
  • hydrogen bonds
  • ionic interactions
  • and hydrophobic interactions

15
Active Site
http//gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/Bio
BookEnzym.html
16
Active Site
http//gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/Bio
BookEnzym.html
17
Specificity
  • The requirement for complementarity in the
    configuration of substrate and enzyme explains
    the remarkable specificity of most enzymes.
    Generally, a given enzyme is able to catalyze
    only a single chemical reaction or, at most, a
    few reactions involving substrates sharing the
    same general structure.

18
How Enzymes Work
http//gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/Bio
BookEnzym.html
19
Co-Factors
  • Many enzymes require the presence of an
    additional, nonprotein, cofactor.
  • Some of these are metal ions such as Zn2 (the
    cofactor for carbonic anhydrase), Cu2, Mn2, K,
    and Na.
  • Some cofactors are small organic molecules called
    coenzymes. The B vitamins
  • thiamine (B1)
  • riboflavin (B2) and
  • nicotinamide
  • are precursors of coenzymes.

20
  • Coenzymes may be covalently bound to the protein
    part (called the apoenzyme) of enzymes as a
    prosthetic group. Others bind more loosely and,
    in fact, may bind only transiently to the enzyme
    as it performs its catalytic act.

21
Naming of Enzymes
  • The International Union of Biochemistry (I.U.B.)
    initiated standards of enzyme nomenclature which
    recommend that enzyme names indicate both the
    substrate acted upon and the type of reaction
    catalyzed. Under this system, the enzyme uricase
    is called urate O2 oxidoreductase, while the
    enzyme glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) is
    called L-aspartate 2-oxoglutarate
    aminotransferase.

22
  • Enzymes can be classified by the kind of chemical
    reaction catalyzed.
  • Addition or removal of water
  • Hydrolases - these include esterases,
    carbohydrases, nucleases, deaminases, amidases,
    and proteases
  • Hydrases such as fumarase, enolase, aconitase and
    carbonic anhydrase
  • http//www.worthington-biochem.com/introBiochem/li
    feProcesses.htmlnaming

23
  • Transfer of electrons
  • Oxidases
  • Dehydrogenases
  • Transfer of a radical
  • Transglycosidases - of monosaccharides
  • Transphosphorylases and phosphomutases - of a
    phosphate group
  • Transaminases - of amino group
  • Transmethylases - of a methyl group
  • Transacetylases - of an acetyl group

24
  • Splitting or forming a C-C bond
  • Desmolases
  • Changing geometry or structure of a molecule
  • Isomerases
  • Joining two molecules through hydrolysis of
    pyrophosphate bond in ATP or other tri-phosphate
  • Ligases

25
Enzyme Production
  • Typically produced in cell lines designed for
    overexpression under fermentation conditions that
    favor expression.
  • Enzymes can be expressed extracellularly (outside
    the cell), intracellularly (inside the cell), or
    both.
  • Recovery of proteins expressed intracellularly
    requires cell lysis.
  • Primary cost is separation and purification.

26
Process Steps in Protein Recovery
  • Cell lysis
  • Gross debris removal
  • Protein precipitation
  • Salt removal
  • Chromatographic separation
  • Drying

27
Cell Lysis
  • membrane permeablization (CaCl)
  • sonication
  • French press
  • grinding/bead beating
  • freeze-fracture
  • osmotic pressure

28
Gross Debris Removal
  • Microfiltration (hollow fiber filter, tangential
    flow filter)
  • Centrifugation
  • Protein precipitation
  • Salting-out with inorganic salts (ammonium
    sulfate)
  • Addition of organic solvents (MeOH) at low
    temperature

29
Salt Removal
  • dialysis
  • size exclusion chromatography
  • reverse osmosis
  • electrodialysis
  • ultrafiltration with molecular weight cut-off
    filters

30
Chromatographic separation
  • Adsorption
  • Ion-exchange chromatography
  • Gel filtration
  • Affinity chromatography
  • Crystallization
  • Drying

31
Uses of Enzymes
  • Food Production
  • Cheese (rennet)
  • Beverage brewing (amylase, trypsin)
  • Meat tenderizers
  • Tofu production
  • Wine-making (pectinase)
  • Lactose removal in milk (lactase)

32
Uses of Enzymes
  • Chemical production
  • detergents
  • Fructose production from glucose (glucose
    isomerase)
  • Amino acid production
  • Vitamin production
  • Optical resolution of DL amino acid mixtures
  • Glucose production from starch
  • Aspartic acid
  • Urocanic acid production (UV block)
  • Ethanol production

33
Medical Uses
  • Antibiotic production
  • Blood purification
  • Treatment of metabolic disorders
  • Wound healing and antibacterial agents
  • Treatment of stomach problems
  • Blood clot removal
  • Anticancer medicines

34
Chemical Analysis and Process Monitoring
  • Enzymatic chemical assays
  • Immobilized enzyme electrodes

35
Most Enzymes are Proteins
  • The ribosomes are catalytic. They catalyze the
    formation of peptide bonds between amino acids.
    Ribosomes are composed of RNA and protein.
    However, the active part of the ribosome is RNA.
    Rare example on non-protein enzymes.
  • http//users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPa
    ges/E/Enzymes.html

36
Examples of enzymes
  • Catalase
  • catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide
    into water and oxygen. 2H2O2 -gt 2H2O O2
  • One molecule of catalase can break 40 million
    molecules of hydrogen peroxide each second.

37
  • Carbonic anhydrase.
  • Found in red blood cells where it catalyzes the
    reaction CO2 H2O lt-gt H2CO3
  • It enables red blood cells to transport carbon
    dioxide from the tissues to the lungs.
    Discussion
  • One molecule of carbonic anhydrase can process
    one million molecules of CO2 each second.

38
  • Acetylcholinesterase.
  • Catalyzes the breakdown of the neurotransmitter
    acetylcholine at several types of synapses as
    well as at the neuromuscular junction - the
    specialized synapse that triggers the contraction
    of skeletal muscle.
  • One molecule of acetylcholinesterase breaks down
    25,000 molecules of acetylcholine each second.
    This speed makes possible the rapid "resetting"
    of the synapse for transmission of another nerve
    impulse.

39
Enzyme Kinetics
  • Enzymatic reaction
  • E S ES E P

Rate expression for product formation v dP/dt
k2(ES)
d(ES)/dt k1(E)(S)-k-1(ES)-k2(ES)
Conservation of enzyme (E) (E0) (ES)
40
Two Methods to Proceed
  • Rapid equilibrium assumption define equilibrium
    coefficient
  • Km k-1/k1 ES/ES
  • Quasi-steady state assumption
  • ES k1ES/(k-1k2)
  • Both methods yield the same final equation

41
Michaelis- Menten Kinetics
42
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
  • When v 1/2 Vmax, S Km so Km is sometimes
    called the half-saturation constant and sometimes
    the Michaelis constant

43
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
  • units on k2 are amount product per amount of
    enzyme per unit time (also called the turnover
    number). Units on E0 are amount of enzyme
    (moles, grams, units, etc.) per unit volume
  • Km has the same units as S (mole/liter, etc.)

44
Experimentally Determining Rate Parameters for
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics Lineweaver-Burk
Eadie-Hofstee Hanes- WoolfBatch Kinetics
45
In Class Assignment
  • Form groups of 3-4
  • Write on a piece of paper.
  • 35 words or phrases that you think I expect you
    to be able to define without looking at notes or
    the text. Try to choose the words or phrases I
    would select.

46
  • Micronutrients
  • CNP ratio
  • Heterotrophs
  • Autotrophs
  • Enzyme
  • Active site
  • Activation energy
  • Cell lysis
  • Steps in protein purification
  • Uses of enzymes
  • Plasmid
  • Procaryote
  • Eucaryote
  • Virus
  • Ribosome
  • Cytoplasm
  • Central dogma
  • Replication
  • Transcription
  • Translation
  • Rich versus minimal media
  • macronutrients
  • Protein
  • Lipid
  • Amino acid
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Antibody
  • Membrane
  • DNA
  • RNA
  • Nucleotide
  • base

47
Project
  • We will work together to define your project for
    this course. Begin by selecting a pharmaceutical
    product or therapy or disease that you are
    interested in. If you have selected a disease,
    we can then identify biologically produced
    products or therapies that target that disease.
    Some examples of diseases are Heart disease,
    Tuberculoses, Aids, Diabetes, Leukemia, other
    Cancers, Multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimers.
    After we have identified the drug or therapy, we
    will narrow the focus of your design. The design
    project may consist of a reactor system, a
    separation system, etc.

48
  • About one half of the project report will discuss
    the disease, the drug or therapy, the current or
    proposed manufacturing process, the current state
    of the drug or therapy (clinical trials,
    commercial product, prospective candidate), the
    current manufacturer, the patent activity, and
    the actual or estimated sales. The other half
    will be you design of some aspect of the
    manufacturing process. Included in the design
    will be your specifications for amount of product
    you are producing and why you selected that rate,
    type of equipment, size of equipment, detailed
    description of equipment, associated
    instrumentation, process control strategy, brief
    plan for validation of the equipment, cleaning
    and sterilizing procedures, typical operating
    problems you might expect and operating
    procedures.

49
  • Please select a project topic as soon as possible
    (within 2 weeks) and we will begin to work
    together to define your project. Send me you
    selections and ideas by email (ckelly_at_syr.edu).

50
Possible Project Topics
  • Amevive, a treatment for psoriasis from Biogen
    Inc.
  • Avonex, Biogen Inc.
  • Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc. won approval of
    Velcade, a treatment for types of cancer in 2003.
  • Cubist Pharmaceuticals Inc. of Lexington received
    approval for Cubicin, an antibiotic for stubborn
    infections in 2003.

51
  • Genzyme Inc. of Cambridge won two FDA approvals
    in 2003. Fabrazyme for treatment of Fabry
    disease, and
  • Genzyme and partner BioMarin won approval for
    Aldurazyme to treat MPS 1, a deadly condition
    caused by an enzyme deficiency.
  • Taxol, insulin, antibiotics
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