首页 | 官方网站   微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We have developed a strategy for immobilization-stabilization of alpha-chymotrypsin by multipoint covalent attachment of the enzyme, through its amino groups, to agarosealdehyde gels. We have studied the role of the main variables that control the intensity of these enzyme-support multi-interaction processes (surface density of aldehyde groups in the activated gel, contact time between the immobilized enzyme and the activated support prior to borohydride reduction of the derivatives, etc.). In this way, we have prepared a number of very different chymotrypsinagarose derivatives. Our best derivatives, with the most intense multipoint attachment, were more stable than one-point attached derivatives and were more than 60,000-fold more stable than soluble enzyme in the absence of autolysis phenomena. In spite of the dramatic stabilization, the catalytic activity of these derivatives is little changed (they only lose 35% of intrinsic activity after this intense enzyme-support multi-interaction process). In addition, we have also demonstrated the very high capacity of 6% aldehyde-agarose gels to immobilize pure chymotrypsin (40 mg enzyme/mL catalyst). Furthermore, we have been able to establish a clear correlation between enzyme-support multipoint covalent attachment, stabilization against very different denaturing agents (heat, urea, organic cosolvents), and insensitivity of those immobilized chymotrypsin molecules to some activating agents.  相似文献   

2.
We have developed a strategy for immobilization-stabilization of penicillin G acylase (PGA) from Kluyvera citrophila by controlled multipoint covalent attachment to agarose-aldehyde gels. This enzyme is composed by two dissimilar subunits noncovalently bound. Thus, in this article we establish clear correlations between enzyme stabilization and the multipoint immobilization and/or between enzyme stabilization and the involvement of the two subunits in the attachment of them to the support. We have demonstrated that important thermal stabilizations of derivatives were only obtained through a very intense enzyme-support multipoint attachment involving the whole enzyme molecule. In this way, we have prepared derivatives preserving more than 90% of catalytic activity and being more than 1000-fold more stable than soluble and one-point attached enzyme. In addition, the involvement of the two subunits in the covalent attachment to the support has proved to be essential to develop interesting strategies for reactivation of inactivated enzyme molecules [e.g., by refolding of immobilized PGA after previous unfolding with urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)]. (c) 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
The controlled and partial modification of epoxy groups of Eupergit C and EP-Sepabeads with sodium sulfide has permitted the preparation of thiol-epoxy supports. Their use allowed not only the specific immobilization of enzymes through their thiol groups via thiol-disulfide interchange, but also enzyme stabilization via multipoint covalent attachment. Penicillin G acylase (PGA) from Escherichia coli and lipase from Rhizomucor miehei were used as model enzymes. Both enzymes lacked exposed cysteine residues, but were introduced via chemical modification under very mild conditions. In the first moments of the immobilization, a certain percentage of immobilized protein could be released from the support by incubation with DTT; this confirms that the first step was via a thiol-disulfide interchange. Moreover, the promotion of some further epoxy-enzyme bonds was confirmed because no enzyme release was detected after some immobilization time by incubation with DTT. In the case of the heterodimeric PGA, it was possible to demonstrate the formation of at least one epoxy bond per enzyme subunit by analyzing with SDS-PAGE the supernatants obtained after boiling the enzyme derivatives in the presence of mercaptoethanol and SDS. Thermal inactivation studies showed that these multipoint enzyme-support attachments promoted an increase in the stability of the immobilized enzymes. In both cases, the stabilization factor was around 12-15-fold comparing optimal derivatives with their just-thiol immobilized counterparts.  相似文献   

4.
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.  相似文献   

5.
Sepabeads-EP (a new epoxy support) has been utilized to immobilize-stabilize the enzyme penicillin G acylase (PGA) via multipoint covalent attachment. These supports are very robust and suitable for industrial purposes. Also, the internal geometry of the support is composed by cylindrical pores surrounded by the convex surfaces (this offers a good geometrical congruence for reaction with the enzyme), and it has a very high superficial density of epoxy groups (around 100 micromol/mL). These features should permit a very intense enzyme-support interaction. However, the final stability of the immobilized enzyme is strictly dependent on the immobilization protocol. By using conventional immobilization protocols (neutral pH values, nonblockage of the support) the stability of the immobilized enzyme was quite similar to that achieved using Eupergit C to immobilize the PGA. However, when using a more sophisticated three-step immobilization/stabilization/blockage procedure, the Sepabeads derivative was hundreds-fold more stable than Eupergit C derivatives. The protocol used was as follows: (i) the enzyme was first covalently immobilized under very mild experimental conditions (e.g., pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C); (ii) the already immobilized enzyme was further incubated under more drastic conditions (higher pH values, long incubation periods, etc.) in order to "facilitate" the formation of new covalent linkages between the immobilized enzyme molecule and the support; (iii) the remaining epoxy groups of the support were blocked with very hydrophilic compounds to stop any additional interaction between the enzyme and the support. This third point was found to be critical for obtaining very stable enzymes: derivatives blocked with mercaptoethanol were much less stable than derivatives blocked with glycine or other amino acids. This was attributed to the better masking of the hydrophobicity of the support by the amino acids (having two charges).  相似文献   

6.
We have tested the effect of chemical modifications with formaldehyde on the activity/stability of immobilized derivatives of the enzyme penicillin G acylase (PGA). These derivatives were previously stabilized through enzyme-support multipoint covalent attachment. We carried out very different chemical treatments of our derivatives by testing the effect of different variables which control the intensity and the nature of these amine-formaldehyde reactions. The variables tested were: formaldehyde concentration, pH, time, and temperature. We also developed a colorimetric titration of the free amine groups on immobilized PGA in order to evaluate the extension of the reaction between formaldehyde and the amine groups of the enzyme. As a consequence of these studies, we have been able to get additional stabilizations of our previously stabilized-immobilized derivatives: e.g. a factor of 24-fold was achieved in terms of stabilization against irreversible thermal inactivation. The integrated effect of additional chemical modification plus previous multipoint covalent attachment has allowed us to prepare PGA derivatives which are 50,000 more thermostable than native PGA as well as most of the commercial PGA derivatives.  相似文献   

7.
The ideal derivatized support for the clinical use of an immobilized enzyme system should irreversibly bind active enzyme. We have investigated the behavior of heparinase and bilirubin oxidase immobilized via cyanogen bromide, tresyl chloride, epoxide, or carbodiimidazole activated natural and synthetic matrices. The protein bound to each activated support was 90% for cyanogen bromide (CNBr) activated agarose, 50-80% for tresyl chloride activated agarose, and 50% for oxirane activated acrylic (Eupergit C). The activity retention of immobilized heparinase was greatest (50%) with CNBr activated agarose while for the immobilization of bilirubin oxidase, the activity retention was greatest (25-30%) with tresyl chloride activated agarose and oxirane activated acrylic.The stability of the different covalent bonds was studied in vitro with radioiodinated enzymes. The leaching profiles showed the same trends for each support and chemistry. A plateau in portein leaching was reached after a few hours of incubatttion and the transient leaching period was well represented byu a logarithimic function of time. The amount of enzyme released from the least stable support (CNBr activated agarose) in 24 h was injected intravenously in New Zealand white rabbits. Using an indirect enzyme-linked immunnosorbant assay (ELISA), no immune responce was detected. The transient leaching profile was shortenend by washingthe enzyme-support conjugate with 1M hydroxylamine, pH8.5 intermolecular cross-linking with glutaraldehyde also improves the enzyme-support stability. Tresyl chloride and oxirane activated supports produce bonds with improved stability without adversely affecting enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

8.
Hydrolysis of proteins by immobilized-stabilized alcalase-glyoxyl agarose   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
This paper presents stable Alcalase-glyoxyl derivatives, to be used in the controlled hydrolysis of proteins. They were produced by immobilizing-stabilizing Alcalase on cross-linked 10% agarose beads, using low and high activation grades of the support and different immobilization times. The Alcalase glyoxyl derivatives were compared to other agarose derivatives, prepared using glutaraldehyde and CNBr as activation reactants. The performance of derivatives in the hydrolysis of casein was also tested. At pH 8.0 and 50 degrees C, Alcalase derivatives produced with 1 h of immobilization time on agarose activated with glutaraldehyde, CNBr, and low and high glyoxyl groups concentration presented half-lives of ca. 10, 29, 60, and 164 h, respectively. More extensive immobilization monotonically led to higher stabilization. The most stabilized Alcalase-glyoxyl derivative was produced using 96 h of immobilization time and high activation grade of the support. It presented half-life of ca. 23 h, at pH 8.0 and 63 degrees C and was ca. 500-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme. Thermal inactivation of all derivatives followed a single-step non-first-order kinetics. The most stable derivative presented ca. 54% of the activity of the soluble enzyme for the hydrolysis of casein and of the small substrate Boc-Ala-ONp. This behavior suggests that the decrease in activity was due to enzyme distortion but not to wrong orientation. The hydrolysis degree of casein at 80 degrees C with the most stabilized enzyme was 2-fold higher than that achieved using soluble enzyme, as a result of the thermal inactivation of the latter. Therefore, the high stability of the new Alcalase-glyoxyl derivative allows the design of continuous processes to hydrolyze proteins at temperatures that avoid microbial growth.  相似文献   

9.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(1):107-113
First, the enzyme immobilized on cyanide bromide agarose beads (CNBr) (that did not involve all enzyme subunits in the immobilization) has been crosslinked with aldehyde-dextran. This preparation did not any longer release enzyme subunits and become fully stable at pH 4 and 25 °C.Then, the stabilities of many different enzyme preparations (enzyme immobilized on CNBr, that derivative further crosslinked with aldehyde-dextran, enzyme immobilized on highly activated amino-epoxy supports, GDH immobilized on supports having a few animo groups and many epoxy groups, GDH immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose beads at pH 7, and that preparation further incubated at pH 10, and finally the enzyme immobilized on this support directly at pH 10) were compared at pH 4 and high temperatures, conditions where both dissociation and distortion play a relevant role in the enzyme inactivation. The most stable preparation was that prepared at pH 7 and incubated at pH 10, followed by GDH immobilized on amino and epoxy supports and the third one was the enzyme immobilized on glyoxyl-agarose at pH 10.The incubation of all enzyme preparations in saturated guanidine solutions produced the full inactivation of all enzyme preparations. When not all enzyme subunits were immobilized, activity was not recovered at all. Among the other derivatives, only glyoxyl preparations (the most inert supports and those where a more intense multipoint covalent attachment were expected) gave significant reactivation when re-incubated in aqueous medium. After optimization of the reactivation conditions, the enzyme immobilized at pH 7 and later incubated at pH 10 recovered 100% of the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

10.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(10):1692-1698
For the immobilization-stabilization of multimeric enzymes, we propose a novel heterofunctional support containing a very low concentration of ionized amino groups and a very high concentration of very poorly reactive glyoxyl (aldehyde) groups. A large tetrameric enzyme, β-galactosidase from Thermus sp., was purified and dramatically stabilized with this novel support. The enzyme was first immobilized by physical adsorption via selective multipoint anionic exchange involving the largest region of the enzyme containing all enzyme subunits. Then, an additional long incubation of the immobilized derivative under alkaline conditions was performed in order to promote an intense intramolecular multipoint covalent attachment between amino groups of the adsorbed enzyme and the very stable glyoxyl groups on the support. This novel β-galactosidase derivative is the first one in which the four subunits of this enzyme become attached to a pre-existing support. Additionally, the novel amino-glyoxyl supports were much more suitable than amino-epoxy supports for intramolecular multipoint covalent immobilization of the adsorbed enzyme onto the support. In fact, at pH 7.0, the new supports covalently immobilize the physically adsorbed protein 24-fold more rapidly than epoxy supports. Furthermore, derivatives prepared on amino-glyoxyl supports preserved 85% of catalytic activity and were 5-fold more stable than derivatives prepared on amino-epoxy supports and more than 1000-fold more stable than soluble enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
We have developed a strategy for immobilization-stabilization of trypsin by multipoint covalent attachment to agarose (aldehyde) gels. We have studied the role of four main variables that control the intensity of the trypsin (amine)-agarose (aldehyde) multiinteraction processes: (a) surface density of aldehyde groups in the activated gels, (b) pH of the multiinteraction medium, (c) contact time between insolubilized enzyme and activated support prior to borohydride reduction of the derivatives, and (d) temperature. Different combinations of these four variables have been tested to prepare a number of trypsin-agarose derivatives. All these derivatives preserved 100% of catalytic activity but showed very different stability values. The less stable derivative had exactly the same stability of soluble trypsin in the absence of autolysis phenomena. On the other hand, the three-dimensional structure of the most stable derivative was 5000-fold more stable than the one corresponding to unmodified trypsin. Amino acid analysis of hydrolysates of this very stable derivative reveals that seven lysine residues per trypsin molecule have reacted with the activated support during the process of preparation of the derivative.  相似文献   

12.
Discovery of new protease inhibitors may result in potential therapeutic agents or useful biotechnological tools. Obtainment of these molecules from natural sources requires simple, economic, and highly efficient purification protocols. The aim of this work was the obtainment of affinity matrices by the covalent immobilization of dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV) and papain onto cellulose membranes, previously activated with formyl (FCM) or glyoxyl groups (GCM). GCM showed the highest activation grade (10.2?µmol aldehyde/cm2). We implemented our strategy for the rational design of immobilized derivatives (RDID) to optimize the immobilization. pH 9.0 was the optimum for the immobilization through the terminal α-NH2, configuration predicted as catalytically competent. However, our data suggest that protein immobilization may occur via clusters of few reactive groups. DPP-IV?GCM showed the highest maximal immobilized protein load (2.1?µg/cm2), immobilization percentage (91%), and probability of multipoint covalent attachment. The four enzyme-support systems were able to bind at least 80% of the reversible competitive inhibitors bacitracin/cystatin, compared with the available active sites in the immobilized derivatives. Our results show the potentialities of the synthesized matrices for affinity purification of protease inhibitors and confirm the robustness of the RDID strategy to optimize protein immobilization processes with further practical applications.  相似文献   

13.
A new strategy has been developed for site-directed immobilization/rigidification of genetically modified enzymes through multipoint covalent attachment on bifunctional disulfide-glyoxyl supports. Here the mechanism is described as a two-step immobilization/rigidification protocol where the enzyme is directly immobilized by thiol-disulfide exchange between the β-thiol of the single genetically introduced cysteine and the few disulfide groups presented on the support surface (3 μmol/g). Afterward, the enzyme is uniquely rigidified by multipoint covalent attachment (MCA) between the lysine residues in the vicinity of the introduced cysteine and the many glyoxyl groups (220 μmol/g) on the support surface. Both site-directed immobilization and rigidification have been possible only on these novel bifunctional supports. In fact, this technology has made possible to elucidate the protein regions where rigidification by MCA promoted higher protein stabilizations. Hence, rigidification of vicinity of position 333 from lipase 2 from Geobacillus thermocatenulatus (BTL2) promoted a stabilization factor of 33 regarding the unipunctual site-directed immobilized derivative. In the same context, rigidification of penicillin G acylase from E. coli (PGA) through position β201 resulted in a stabilization factor of 1069. Remarkably, when PGA was site-directed rigidified through that position, it presented a half-life time of 140 h under 60% (v/v) of dioxane and 4 °C, meaning a derivative eight times more stable than the PGA randomly immobilized on glyoxyl-disulfide agarose. Herein we have opened a new scenario to optimize the stabilization of proteins via multipoint covalent immobilization, which may represent a breakthrough in tailor-made tridimensional rigidification of proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Glucose oxidase (GOX) has been immobilized on different activated supports, including glyoxyl agarose, epoxy sepabeads and glutaraldehyde-activated supports. Immobilization onto supports pre-activated with glutaraldehyde rendered the most thermo-stable preparation of GOX. Therefore, as the glutaraldehyde chemistry gave a high stabilization of the enzyme, we proposed another technique for improving the multipoint attachment through glutaraldehyde: the enzyme was ionically adsorbed on cationic supports with primary amino groups and then the immobilized preparation was treated with a glutaraldehyde solution. The decrease on enzyme activity was <20%. Following this methodology, we achieved the highest stability of all the immobilization systems analyzed, showing a half-life 100 times higher than the soluble enzyme. Moreover, this derivative showed a higher stability in the presence of organic solvents (for instance methanol) or hydrogen epoxide than the ionically adsorbed enzyme or the soluble one. Therefore, the adsorption of GOX on aminated cationic support and subsequent treatment with glutaraldehyde was presented as a very successful methodology for achieving a very stable biocatalyst.  相似文献   

15.
Lipases are the most widely used enzymes in biocatalysis, and the most utilized method for enzyme immobilization is using hydrophobic supports at low ionic strength. This method allows the one step immobilization, purification, stabilization, and hyperactivation of lipases, and that is the main cause of their popularity. This review focuses on these lipase immobilization supports. First, the advantages of these supports for lipase immobilization will be presented and the likeliest immobilization mechanism (interfacial activation on the support surface) will be revised. Then, its main shortcoming will be discussed: enzyme desorption under certain conditions (such as high temperature, presence of cosolvents or detergent molecules). Methods to overcome this problem include physical or chemical crosslinking of the immobilized enzyme molecules or using heterofunctional supports. Thus, supports containing hydrophobic acyl chain plus epoxy, glutaraldehyde, ionic, vinylsulfone or glyoxyl groups have been designed. This prevents enzyme desorption and improved enzyme stability, but it may have some limitations, that will be discussed and some additional solutions will be proposed (e.g., chemical amination of the enzyme to have a full covalent enzyme-support reaction). These immobilized lipases may be subject to unfolding and refolding strategies to reactivate inactivated enzymes. Finally, these biocatalysts have been used in new strategies for enzyme coimmobilization, where the most stable enzyme could be reutilized after desorption of the least stable one after its inactivation.  相似文献   

16.
Trypsin was immobilized on chitosan gels coagulated with 0.1 or 1 M NaOH and activated with glutaraldehyde or glycidol. The derivatives were characterized by their recovered activity, thermal (40, 55 and 70 degrees C) and alkaline (pH 11) stabilities, amount of enzyme immobilized on gels for several enzyme loads (8-14 mg(protein)/g(Gel)) and compared to agarose derivatives. Enzyme loads higher than 14 mg(protein)/g(Gel) can be immobilized on glutaraldehyde derivatives, which showed 100% immobilization yield and, for loads up to 8 mg(protein)/g(Gel), 100% recovered activity. Activation with glycidol led to lower immobilization yields than the ones obtained with glutaraldehyde, 61% for agarose-glyoxyl (AgGly) with low grade of activation and 16% for the chitosan-glyoxyl (ChGly), but allowed obtaining the most stable derivative (ChGly), that was 660-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme at 55 and 70 degrees C-approximately threefold more stable than AgGly. The ChGly derivative presented also the highest stability during incubation at pH 11. Analyses of lysine residue contents in soluble and immobilized trypsin indicated formation of multipoint bonds between enzyme and support, for glyoxyl derivatives.  相似文献   

17.
In this work Candida antarctica lipase type B (CALB) was immobilized on agarose and chitosan. The influence of activation agents (glycidol, glutaraldehyde and epichlorohydrin) and immobilization time (5, 24 and 72 h) on hydrolytic activity, thermal and alkaline stabilities of the biocatalyst was evaluated. Protein concentration and enzymatic activity in the supernatant were determined during the immobilization process. More active derivatives were attained when the enzymatic extract was first purified through dialysis. The highest activities achieved were: for agarose-glyoxyl (with glycidol), 845 U/g of gel, after 72 h of immobilization; for chitosan-glutaraldehyde and agarose-glutaraldehyde, respectively, 1209 U/g of gel and 2716 U/g of gel, after 5 h of immobilization. Thermal stability was significantly increased, when compared to the soluble enzyme: 20-fold for agarose-glyoxyl (with glycidol)-CALB, 18-fold for chitosan-glutaraldehyde-CALB and 21-fold for agarose-glutaraldehyde. The best derivative, 58-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme, was obtained when CALB was immobilized on chitosan activated in two steps, using glycidol and glutaraldehyde, 72 h immobilization time. The stabilization degree of the derivative increased with the immobilization time, an indication that a multipoint covalent attachment between enzyme and the support had really occurred.  相似文献   

18.
Immobilization of enzymes and proteins on activated supports permits the simplification of the reactor design and may be used to improve some enzyme properties. In this sense, supports containing epoxy groups seem to be useful to generate very intense multipoint covalent attachment with different nucleophiles placed on the surface of enzyme molecules (e.g., amino, thiol, hydroxyl groups). However, the intermolecular reaction between epoxy groups and soluble enzymes is extremely slow. To solve this problem, we have designed "tailor-made" heterofunctional epoxy supports. Using these, immobilization of enzymes is performed via a two-step process: (i) an initial physical or chemical intermolecular interaction of the enzyme surface with the new functional groups introduced on the support surface and (ii) a subsequent intense intramolecular multipoint covalent reaction between the nucleophiles of the already immobilized enzyme and the epoxy groups of the supports. The first immobilization may involve different enzyme regions, which will be further rigidified by multipoint covalent attachment. The design of some heterofunctional epoxy supports and the performance of the immobilization protocols are described here. The whole protocol to have an immobilized and stabilized enzyme could take from 3 days to 1 week.  相似文献   

19.
Highly activated glyoxyl-supports rapidly immobilize proteins at pH 10 (where the -amino groups of the Lys groups of the protein surface are very reactive), and stabilize them by multipoint covalent attachment. However, they do not immobilize proteins at pH 8. This paper shows that the enzyme immobilization at this mild pH value is possible by incubation of the enzymes in the presence of different thiolated compounds (dithiothreitol, DTT; was selected as optimal reagent). The thiolated compounds (even the not reducing ones) stabilized the imino bonds formed at pH 8 between the aldehydes in the support and the amino groups of the protein. However, thiolated compounds are unable to reduce the imino bonds or the aldehyde groups and a final reduction step (e.g., using sodium borohydride) was always necessary. After enzyme immobilization through the most reactive amino group of the protein, the further incubation of this immobilized enzyme at pH 10 would improve the reactivity of the -amino groups of the Lys residues of the protein surface. Then, an intense multipoint covalent reaction of the enzyme with the dense layer of glyoxyl groups in the support could be obtained, increasing the stability of the immobilized enzyme. Using three different industrially relevant enzymes (penicillin G acylase from Escherichia coli (PGA), lipase from Bacillus thermocatenulatus (BTL2) and glutaryl acylase from Pseudomonas sp. (GA)), new immobilized-stabilized biocatalysts of the enzymes were produced. After reduction, the preparations incubated at pH 10 were more stable than those that were only immobilized and reduced at pH 8. In the case of the PGA, this preparation was even 4–5-fold more stable than those obtained by direct immobilization at pH 10 (around 40,000–50,000-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme).  相似文献   

20.
The preparation of novel immobilized and stabilized derivatives of trypsin is reported here. The new derivatives preserved 80% of the initial catalytic activity toward synthetic substrates [benzoyl-arginine p-nitroanilide (BAPNA)] and were 50,000-fold more thermally stable than the diluted soluble enzyme in the absence of autolysis. Trypsin was immobilized on highly activated glyoxyl-Sepharose following a two-step immobilization strategy: (a) first, a multipoint covalent immobilization at pH 8.5 that only involves low pK(a) amino groups (e.g., those derived from the activation of trypsin from trypsinogen) is performed and (b) next, an additional alkaline incubation at pH 10 is performed to favor an intense, additional multipoint immobilization between the high concentration of proximate aldehyde groups on the support surface and the high pK(a) amino groups at the enzyme surface region that participated in the first immobilization step. Interestingly, the new, highly stable trypsin derivatives were also much more active in the proteolysis of high molecular weight proteins when compared with a nonstabilized derivative prepared on CNBr-activated Sepharose. In fact, all the proteins contained a cheese whey extract had been completely proteolyzed after 6 h at pH 9 and 50°C, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Under these experimental conditions, the immobilized biocatalysts preserve more than 90% of their initial activity after 20 days. Analysis of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the best immobilized trypsin derivative showed a surface region containing two amino terminal groups and five lysine (Lys) residues that may be responsible for this novel and interesting immobilization and stabilization. Moreover, this region is relatively far from the active site of the enzyme, which could explain the good results obtained for the hydrolysis of high-molecular weight proteins.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司    京ICP备09084417号-23

京公网安备 11010802026262号