4.6 Article

Immobilization of Penicillin G Acylase on Vinyl Sulfone-Agarose: An Unexpected Effect of the Ionic Strength on the Performance of the Immobilization Process

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27217587

Keywords

enzyme immobilization; stabilization; heterofunctional supports; multipoint covalent attachment; immobilization optimization; multi-step immobilization; vinyl sulfone supports

Funding

  1. CNPq (CNPq scholarship-Brazil) [MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033]
  2. ESF Investing in your future [FPU17/05193]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Penicillin G acylase from Escherichia coli was successfully immobilized on vinyl sulfone agarose beads. The immobilization was optimized with the purpose of obtaining a stable and active biocatalyst. The study found that vinyl sulfone agarose beads have heterofunctionality, offering new possibilities for enzyme immobilization.
Penicillin G acylase (PGA) from Escherichia coli was immobilized on vinyl sulfone (VS) agarose. The immobilization of the enzyme failed at all pH values using 50 mM of buffer, while the progressive increase of ionic strength permitted its rapid immobilization under all studied pH values. This suggests that the moderate hydrophobicity of VS groups is enough to transform the VS-agarose in a heterofunctional support, that is, a support bearing hydrophobic features (able to adsorb the proteins) and chemical reactivity (able to give covalent bonds). Once PGA was immobilized on this support, the PGA immobilization on VS-agarose was optimized with the purpose of obtaining a stable and active biocatalyst, optimizing the immobilization, incubation and blocking steps characteristics of this immobilization protocol. Optimal conditions were immobilization in 1 M of sodium sulfate at pH 7.0, incubation at pH 10.0 for 3 h in the presence of glycerol and phenyl acetic acid, and final blocking with glycine or ethanolamine. This produced biocatalysts with stabilities similar to that of the glyoxyl-PGA (the most stable biocatalyst of this enzyme described in literature), although presenting just over 55% of the initially offered enzyme activity versus the 80% that is recovered using the glyoxyl-PGA. This heterofuncionality of agarose VS beads opens new possibilities for enzyme immobilization on this support.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available