ENZYME
IMMOBILIZATION
Immobilization means imprisonment of an enzyme in a distinct phase. Immobilized
enzymes are enzymes which are attached in or onto the surface of an insoluble
support.
The immobilized enzymes have several
advantages over the soluble enzyme:
Convenience: Miniscule amounts of protein dissolve in the reaction, so workup can be
much easier. Upon completion, reaction mixtures typically contain only solvent
and reaction products.
Economical: Immobilized
enzymes can be easily removed from the reaction. There is no loss of enzymes.
So the enzymes can be repeatedly reused.
Stability:
Immobilized enzymes typically have greater thermal and operational stability
than the soluble form of the enzyme
Less contamination: There is less chance of contamination in products while
immobilized enzymes are used.
There are a number of
requirements to achieve a successful immobilization:
The biological component must retain
substantial biological activity after attachment
It must have a long-term stability
The
sensitivity of the enzyme must be preserved after attachment
Overloading
can block or inactivate the active site of the immobilized biomaterial,
therefore, must be avoided
Methods of Enzyme
Immobilization:
There are many
different methods of immobilizing enzymes. The following methods are commonly
used;
- adsorption
- entrapment
- encapsulation
- covalent
binding
Figure
1: Different methods of enzyme immobilization
1.
Adsorption:
It is the simplest immobilization method in which the
enzyme and the support are mixed in suitable conditions. The first immobilized enzyme
model: invertase on the activated charcoal was developed by Nelson and Griffin,
1916. The forces are weak so leakage is generally a problem in adsorption
method. Supports such as alluminium hydroxide are often utilized. With a
suitable charged matrix, ionic interactions may also be promoted. This
technique is technically undemanding and economically attractive. The regeneration
is also easy in this technique. The best known industrial example: amino
acylase immobilized on DEAE-Sephadex in the production of amino acids is an
example of adsortion method.
2. Entrapment
Enzymes may be entrapped within the matrix of a polymeric
gel such as polyacrylamide type gels naturally derived gels e.g. cellulose
triacetate, agar, gelatin carrageenan, alginate etc. The form and nature of
matrix vary. The pore size of matrix should be adjusted to prevent the loss of
enzyme from the matrix due to diffusion.
In order to immobilize the enzymes by this technique, the
enzyme together with the gel monomers are incubated. Then gel polymerization is
promoted by adding few catalysts. Once there is complete polymerization of
gels, the enzymes are immobilized in to the net working of the polymerized
gels. Polyacrylamide and polymethacrylamide gels are examples of gels used
in this technique. Gel pore size is a
crucial factor in this technique.
Figure 2: Enzyme immobilization by entrapment and
encapsulation techniques
3. Encapsulation
Encapsulation involves entrapping the enzymes within a
semipermeable membrane capsule such as cellulose nitrate and nylon-based
membranes. The method of encapsulation is cheap and simple but its
effectiveness largely depends on the stability of enzyme although the catalyst
is very effectively retained wiithin the capsule. The main disadvantage of this
technique is that only small amount of substrate molecule is utilized with the
intact membrane.
4.
Covalent binding
The most widely used method for enzyme immobilization is the covalent
binding method. It is technically more complex and requires a variety of often
expensive chemicals. It is time-consuming. But immobilized enzyme preparations are stable and
leaching is minimal. Enzymes are immobilized by a suitable group in the surface
such as hydroxyl groups in supports (e.g cellulose, dextran, agarose) and amino,
carboxyl and sulfhydryl groups in amino acids. The conditions for
immobilization by covalent binding are much more complicated and less mild than
in the cases of physical adsorption and ionic binding. Therefore, covalent
binding may alter the conformational structure and active center of the enzyme,
resulting in major loss of activity and/or changes of the substrate. Covalent
attachment to a support matrix must involve only functional groups of the
enzyme that are not essential for catalytic action. Higher activities result
from prevention of inactivation reactions with amino acid residues of the
active sites. A number of protective methods have been devised such as covalent
attachment of the enzyme in the presence of a competitive inhibitor or
substrate . Many factors influence on the activity of enzymes while immmobilizing
by this technique. The form, shape, density, porosity, pore size distribution,
operational stability and particle size distribution of the supporting matrix
will influence the result.
The ideal support should be cheap, inert, physically
strong and stable. Ideally, it should:
increase the enzyme specificity (kcat/Km)
shift the pH optimum to the desired value for the
process
discourage microbial growth and non-specific
adsorption
Some matrices may possess other properties which are
useful for particular purposes such as;
ferromagnetism (e.g. magnetic iron oxide, enabling transfer of the biocatalyst by means
of magnetic fields)
a catalytic surface (e.g. manganese dioxide, which catalytically removes the
inactivating hydrogen peroxide produced by most oxidases)
There is usually a decrease in specific activity
of an enzyme upon insolubilization: denaturation caused by the coupling process
Microenvironment after immobilization may be drastically different
from that existing in free solution: the physical and chemical character of the
support matrix, or interactions of the matrix with substrates or products
involved in the enzymatic reaction
The Michaelis constant may decrease by more than one order of magnitude when substrate of
opposite charge to the carrier matrix
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