Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents

Doctor of Philosophy Department of Chemical Engineering Peter H. Pfromm One area of considerable importance in modern biotechnology is the preparation of highly active and selective enzyme based biocatalysts for applications in organic solvents. A major challenge is posed by the tendency of enzymes...

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Main Author: Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Kansas State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/3648
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spelling ftkansassu:oai:krex.k-state.edu:2097/3648 2023-05-15T13:56:36+02:00 Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos May application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2097/3648 en_US eng Kansas State University http://hdl.handle.net/2097/3648 Biocatalysis Unfolding Protein-surface interactions Conformational stability Adsorption Fumed silica Biophysics General (0786) Engineering Chemical (0542) Dissertation ftkansassu 2022-03-05T18:31:20Z Doctor of Philosophy Department of Chemical Engineering Peter H. Pfromm One area of considerable importance in modern biotechnology is the preparation of highly active and selective enzyme based biocatalysts for applications in organic solvents. A major challenge is posed by the tendency of enzymes to cluster when suspended in organic solvents. Because the clusters obstruct the transport of substrates to the active site of the enzyme, the observed activity is often severely reduced. Over the past two decades, many strategies have been proposed to mitigate this problem. We have tackled this major hurdle by devising an immobilization strategy that utilizes fumed silica as carrier for the enzyme molecules. Fumed silica is a non-porous nanoparticulated fractal aggregate with unique absorptive properties. The enzyme/fumed silica preparation is formed in two steps. The buffered enzyme molecules are physically adsorbed on the fumed silica and then lyophilized. This protocol was shown to be successful with two enzymes of industrial relevance, Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB) and subtilisin Carlsberg. The maximum observed catalytic activity in hexane reached or even exceeded commercial immobilizates and nonbuffer salt based preparations. The results demonstrated that catalytic activity has an intricate relationship with the nominal surface coverage (%SC) of the support by the enzyme molecules. s. Carlsberg exhibited an ever increasing activity as more surface area was provided per enzyme molecule. The activity leveled off when a sparse surface population was reached. CALB showed a maximum in catalytic activity at an intermediate surface coverage with steep decreases at both lower and higher surface coverage. It was shown that this maximum results from the presence of three distinct surface loading regimes after lyophilization: 1. a low surface coverage where opportunities for multi-attachment to the surface likely lead to detrimental conformational changes, 2. an intermediate surface coverage where interactions with neighboring proteins and the surface help to maintain a higher population of catalytically competent enzyme molecules, and 3. a multi-layer coverage where mass transfer limitations lead to a decrease in the apparent catalytic activity. Conformational stability analyses with both fluorescence and CD spectroscopy showed evidence that these regimes are most likely formed during the adsorption step of our protocol. A low conformational stability region was detected at low surface coverage while adsorbates with highly stable enzyme ensembles were observed at high surface coverage. Secondary structural analysis of the lyophilized nanobiocatalysts with FTIR confirmed a substantial decrease in the alpha-helical components at low surface coverage. In summary, the work presented here traces the phenomenological observation of the catalytic behavior of a nanobiocatalyst to molecular-level: enzyme-enzyme and enzyme-support interactions, which are specific to the intricate properties of the enzyme molecules. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctica Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx)
institution Open Polar
collection Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx)
op_collection_id ftkansassu
language English
topic Biocatalysis
Unfolding
Protein-surface interactions
Conformational stability
Adsorption
Fumed silica
Biophysics
General (0786)
Engineering
Chemical (0542)
spellingShingle Biocatalysis
Unfolding
Protein-surface interactions
Conformational stability
Adsorption
Fumed silica
Biophysics
General (0786)
Engineering
Chemical (0542)
Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos
Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
topic_facet Biocatalysis
Unfolding
Protein-surface interactions
Conformational stability
Adsorption
Fumed silica
Biophysics
General (0786)
Engineering
Chemical (0542)
description Doctor of Philosophy Department of Chemical Engineering Peter H. Pfromm One area of considerable importance in modern biotechnology is the preparation of highly active and selective enzyme based biocatalysts for applications in organic solvents. A major challenge is posed by the tendency of enzymes to cluster when suspended in organic solvents. Because the clusters obstruct the transport of substrates to the active site of the enzyme, the observed activity is often severely reduced. Over the past two decades, many strategies have been proposed to mitigate this problem. We have tackled this major hurdle by devising an immobilization strategy that utilizes fumed silica as carrier for the enzyme molecules. Fumed silica is a non-porous nanoparticulated fractal aggregate with unique absorptive properties. The enzyme/fumed silica preparation is formed in two steps. The buffered enzyme molecules are physically adsorbed on the fumed silica and then lyophilized. This protocol was shown to be successful with two enzymes of industrial relevance, Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB) and subtilisin Carlsberg. The maximum observed catalytic activity in hexane reached or even exceeded commercial immobilizates and nonbuffer salt based preparations. The results demonstrated that catalytic activity has an intricate relationship with the nominal surface coverage (%SC) of the support by the enzyme molecules. s. Carlsberg exhibited an ever increasing activity as more surface area was provided per enzyme molecule. The activity leveled off when a sparse surface population was reached. CALB showed a maximum in catalytic activity at an intermediate surface coverage with steep decreases at both lower and higher surface coverage. It was shown that this maximum results from the presence of three distinct surface loading regimes after lyophilization: 1. a low surface coverage where opportunities for multi-attachment to the surface likely lead to detrimental conformational changes, 2. an intermediate surface coverage where interactions with neighboring proteins and the surface help to maintain a higher population of catalytically competent enzyme molecules, and 3. a multi-layer coverage where mass transfer limitations lead to a decrease in the apparent catalytic activity. Conformational stability analyses with both fluorescence and CD spectroscopy showed evidence that these regimes are most likely formed during the adsorption step of our protocol. A low conformational stability region was detected at low surface coverage while adsorbates with highly stable enzyme ensembles were observed at high surface coverage. Secondary structural analysis of the lyophilized nanobiocatalysts with FTIR confirmed a substantial decrease in the alpha-helical components at low surface coverage. In summary, the work presented here traces the phenomenological observation of the catalytic behavior of a nanobiocatalyst to molecular-level: enzyme-enzyme and enzyme-support interactions, which are specific to the intricate properties of the enzyme molecules.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos
author_facet Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos
author_sort Cruz Jimenez, Juan Carlos
title Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
title_short Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
title_full Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
title_fullStr Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
title_full_unstemmed Hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
title_sort hydrolases on fumed silica: conformational stability studies to enable biocatalysis in organic solvents
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/3648
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/3648
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