| Literature DB >> 28330084 |
Ghada E A Awad1, Abeer A Abd El Aty2, Abeer N Shehata3, Mohamed E Hassan1,4, Magdy M Elnashar5,6,4.
Abstract
Naringinase induced from the fermented broth of marine-derived fungus Aspergillus niger was immobilized into grafted gel beads, to obtain biocatalytically active beads. The support for enzyme immobilization was characterized by ART-FTIR and TGA techniques. TGA revealed a significant improvement in the grafted gel's thermal stability from 200 to 300 °C. Optimization of the enzyme loading capacity increased gradually by 28-fold from 32 U/g gel to 899 U/g gel beads, retaining 99 % of the enzyme immobilization efficiency and 88 % of the immobilization yield. The immobilization process highly improved the enzyme's thermal stability from 50 to 70 °C, which is favored in food industries, and reusability test retained 100 % of the immobilized enzyme activity after 20 cycles. These results are very useful on the marketing and industrial levels.Entities:
Keywords: ART-FTIR (total reflectance Fourier transform infrared); Aspergillus niger; Immobilization; Naringinase; TGA (thermal gravimetric analysis) and biopolymer (grafted alginate gel beads)
Year: 2016 PMID: 28330084 PMCID: PMC4703588 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-015-0338-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Fig. 1FTIR of A calcium alginate (Alg), B alginate hardened with calcium and polyethylenimine (Alg/PE + Ca2+), C alginate and polyethylenimine/Ca2+ beads followed by glutaraldehyde (Alg/PE + Ca+2/GA). D The interaction between the grafted alginate beads and naringinase
Fig. 2TGA thermographs of alginate gel beads (A), aminated beads (B), activated beads (C), and immobilized one (D)
TGA results of the gel beads formation steps and immobilization of naringinase
| Type | TGA, °C |
|---|---|
| Alginate | 200 |
| Alginate + polyethyleneimine | 230 |
| Alg + PEI + glutaraldehyde | 250 |
| Alg + polyethyleneimine + glutaraldehyde + enzyme | 300 |
Optimization of the enzyme loading capacity using grafted alginate beads
| Enzyme concentration percent (%) | Total enzyme units (soaking solution) | Immobilized enzyme | (E.L.C.) | Immobilization yield % (I.Y. %) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 900 | 868 | 835 | 96 |
| 75 | 675 | 610 | 558 | 90 |
| 50 | 450 | 398 | 318 | 88 |
| 25 | 250 | 210 | 180 | 84 |
| 10 | 80 | 60 | 32 | 75 |
Optimization of the enzyme loading time using grafted alginate beads
| Different loading times (h) | Total enzyme units (soaking solution) | Immobilized enzyme | Immobilization efficiency % (I.E.%) | Immobilization yield % (I.Y.%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 900 | 100 | 11 | 61 |
| 4 | 900 | 233 | 25 | 29 |
| 6 | 900 | 400 | 44 | 11 |
| 8 | 900 | 600 | 66 | 22 |
| 10 | 900 | 876 | 97 | 86 |
| 12 | 900 | 899 | 99 | 88 |
| 14 | 900 | 830 | 92 | 81 |
| 16 | 900 | 876 | 97 | 86 |
| 18 | 900 | 890 | 98 | 87 |
| 20 | 900 | 888 | 98 | 87 |
| 22 | 900 | 876 | 97 | 86 |
| 24 | 900 | 889 | 98 | 87 |
Fig. 3a Temperature profile of the free and immobilized naringinase enzyme. b pH profile of the free and immobilized naringinase enzyme
Fig. 4Temperature-stability profile of free and immobilized naringinase at 50, 60, and 70 °C
Fig. 5Hydrolysis of naringin using the free and immobilized naringinase
Fig. 6Michaelis constant of free and immobilized naringinase using Lineweaver–Burk plot method
Fig. 7Shelf stability of free and immobilized naringinase at 4 °C
Fig. 8Operational stability of immobilized naringinase