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Effects of Immobilization on Enzyme Stability and Use

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Title: Effects of Immobilization on Enzyme Stability and Use


1
Effects of Immobilization on Enzyme Stability and
Use
  • Design of enzymatic processes requires knowledge
    of
  • reactant and product selectivity
  • thermodynamic equilibria that may limit product
    yield
  • reaction rate as a function of process conditions
    (Enzyme, substrate(s), Inhibitors,
    temperature, pH, )
  • Two design issues that we have not considered
    are
  • enzyme stability
  • efficiency losses associated with the use of
    homogeneous (soluble) catalysts
  • Immobilization of an enzyme allows
  • it to be retained in a continuous reactor,
  • but its initial activity and its stability
  • directly influence its usefulness
  • in industrial applications.

2
Enzyme Stability
  • Although enzyme storage stability is important,
    it is the operational stability of an enzyme that
    governs its reactor performance.
  • Operation stability is a complex function of
    temperature, pH, substrate and the presence of
    destabilizing agents.
  • Generally, the rate of free enzyme deactivation
    is first order with a deactivation constant, kd
  • Integrating this expression
  • yields the concentration of
  • active enzyme as a function
  • of time

3
Effect of Thermolysin Instability on APM
Production
  • Recall the rate expression developed for APM
    synthesis by thermolysin
  • If thermolysin deactivation were adequately
    described as a first order process, the observed
    reaction rate would have an explicit time
    dependence, as shown below
  • where ET,o represents the initial enzyme
    concentration and kd is the deactivation rate
    constant.
  • The conversion versus time profile for aspartame
    synthesis by a batch process can be developed
    from this expression by integration.

4
Effect of Thermolysin Instability on APM
Production
  • The evolution of L-Asp and conversion with time
    for a batch process is shown below.
  • Depending on the relative rates of reaction and
    enzyme deactivation, the ultimate conversion can
    be strongly affected

5
Effect of Immobilization on Operational Stability
  • Given that activity of enzymes is dictated by
    structure and conformation, the environmental
    change resulting from immobilization affects not
    only maximum activity, but the stability of the
    enzyme preparation.
  • The factors that inactivate enzymes are not
    systematically understood, and depend on the
    intrinsic nature of the enzyme, the method of
    immobilization, and the reaction conditions
    employed.
  • In general, immobilized enzyme preparations
    demonstrate better stability.
  • Note that the immobilized
  • preparation is often more
  • stable than the soluble
  • enzyme and displays a
  • period during which no
  • enzyme activity appears to
  • be lost.

6
Classification of Immobilization Methods for
Enzymes
7
Immobilization by Entrapment
  • Gel entrapment places the enzyme within the
    interstitial
  • spaces of crosslinked, water-insoluble polymer
    gels.
  • Polyacrylamide gels
  • Polysaccharides The solubility of alginate and
    k-Carrageenan varies with the cation, allowing
    these soluble polymers to be crosslinked upon the
    addition of CaCl2 and KCl, respectively.
  • Variations of pore size result in enzyme leakage,
    even after washing. The effect of initiator used
    in polyacrylamide gels can be problematic.

8
Immobilization by Entrapment
  • Microencapsulation encloses enzymes within
    spherical,
  • semi-permeable membranes of 1-100 mm diameter.
  • Urethane prepolymers, when mixed with an aqueous
  • enzyme solution crosslink via urea bonds to
    generate membranes of varying hydrophilicity.
  • Alternatively, photo-
  • crosslinkable resins
  • can be gelled by
  • UV-irradiation.
  • Advantage of Entrapment
  • Enzymes are immobilized without a chemical or
    structural modification. A very general
    technique.
  • Disadvantage of Entrapment
  • High molecular weight substrates have limited
    diffusivity, and cannot be treated with entrapped
    enzymes.

9
Immobilization by Carrier Binding
  • Attachment of an enzyme to an insoluble carrier
    creates an active surface catalyst. Modes of
    surface attachment classify carrier methods into
    physical adsorption, ionic binding and covalent
    binding.
  • Physical Adsorption Enzymes can be bound to
    carriers
  • by physical interaction such as hydrogen bonding
    and/or
  • van der Waals forces.
  • the enzyme structure is unmodified
  • carriers include chitosan, acrylamide
    polymers and silica-alumina
  • binding strength is usually weak and affected by
    temperature and the concentration of reactants.
  • Ionic Binding Stronger enzyme-carrier binding is
    obtained with solid supports containing
    ion-exchange residues.
  • cellulose, glass-fibre paper, polystyrene
    sulfonate
  • pH and ionic strength effects can be significant

10
Immobilization by Carrier Binding
  • Covalent attachment of soluble enzymes to an
    insoluble support is the most common
    immobilization technique.
  • Amino acid residues not involved in the active
    site can be used fix the enzyme to a solid
    carrier
  • Advantages
  • 1. Minimal enzyme leaching from the support
    results
  • in stable productivity
  • 2. Surface placement permits enzyme contact with
  • large substrates
  • Disadvantages
  • 1. Partial modification of residues that
    constitute the active site decreases activity
  • 2. Immobilization conditions can be difficult to
    optimize (often done
  • in the presence of a competitive inhibitor)

11
Most Convenient Residues for Covalent Binding
  • Abundance()Reactions
  • 7.0 27
  • 3.4 31
  • 3.4 16
  • 2.2 13
  • 4.8 4
  • 4.8 4
  • 3.8 6

Amino acid residues with polar and reactive
functional groups are best for covalent binding,
given that they are most often found on the
surface of the enzyme. Shown are the most
convenient residues in descending order. The
average percent composition of proteins (reactive
residues only) is shown, along with the number of
potential binding reactions in which the amino
acids partake.
12
Covalent Attachment Techniques
  • Cyanogen bromide activates supports with vicinal
    hydroxyl groups (polysaccharides, glass beads) to
    yield reactive imidocarbonate derivatives
  • Diazonium derivatives of supports having aromatic
    amino groups are activated for enzyme
    immobilization
  • Under the action of condensing agents (Woodwards
    reagent K), carboxyl or amino groups of supports
    and amino acid residues can be condensed to yield
    peptide linkages.
  • Other methods include diazo coupling, alkylation,
    etc.

13
Immobilization by Crosslinking
  • Bi- or multi-functional compounds serve as
    reagents for intermolecular crosslinking of
    enzymes, creating insoluble aggregates that are
    effective heterogeneous catalysts.
  • Reagents commonly have two identical functional
    groups
  • which react with specific amino acid residues.
  • Common reagents include glutaraldehyde,
  • and diisocyanates,
  • Involvement of the active site in crosslinking
    can lead to great reductions in activity, and the
    gelatinous nature of the product can complicate
    processing.

14
Effects of Enzyme Immobilization on Activity
15
Selecting an Immobilization Technique
  • It is well recognized that no one method can be
    regarded as the universal method for all
    applications or all enzymes. Consider,
  • widely different chemical characteristics of
    enzymes
  • different properties of substrates and products
  • range of potential processes employed
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