| Literature DB >> 29246143 |
Erick Abreu Silveira1,2, Sonia Moreno-Perez3, Alessandra Basso4, Simona Serban4, Rita Pestana Mamede1, Paulo W Tardioli2, Cristiane Sanchez Farinas5, Javier Rocha-Martin1, Gloria Fernandez-Lorente1, Jose M Guisan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Enzymatic ethanolysis of oils (for example, high oleic sunflower oil containing 90% of oleic acid) may yield two different reaction products depending on the regioselectivity of the immobilized lipase biocatalyst. Some lipase biocatalysts exhibit a 1,3-regioselectivity and they produced 2 mols of fatty acid ethyl ester plus 1 mol of sn2-monoacylglycerol (2-MAG) per mol of triglyceride without the release of glycerol. Other lipase biocatalysts are completely non-regioselective releasing 3 mols of fatty acid ethyl ester and 1 mol of glycerol per mol of triglyceride. Lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) adsorbed on hydrophobic supports is a very interesting biocatalyst for the ethanolysis of oil. Modulation of TLL regioselectivity in anhydrous medium was intended via two strategies of TLL immobilization: a. - interfacial adsorption on different hydrophobic supports and b.- interfacial adsorption on a given hydrophobic support under different experimental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: 2-monoolein; Ethyl oleate; Lipase immobilization; Modulation of TLL regioselectivity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29246143 PMCID: PMC5732512 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-017-0407-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Fig. 1Scheme of the possible ethanolysis reactions performed by immobilized TLL depending on its selectivity
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the interfacial adsorption of lipases on hydrophobic supports
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the interfacial adsorption on different hydrophobic supports
Fig. 4Schematic representation of the interfacial adsorption on the same hydrophobic support under different experimental conditions
Main characteristics of the carriers selected for this work
| Polymer | Matrix | Functional groupsa | Pore volumeb | Pore diameterc | Surface areac | Water contentd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mmols OD/g dry support | ml/g | Å | m2/g | % | ||
| PUROLITE | Octadecyl methacrylate | 1.03 | 0.65 | 616 | 116 | 64 |
| SEPABEADS | Octadecyl | n.a | 0.2–0.4 | 100–200 | 60–80 | 55–65 |
| LEWATIT | Methacrylate cross-linked with divinyl benzene | n.a. | 0.51 | 324 | 74 | 60 |
| PUROLITE DVB | Methacrylate cross-linked with divinyl benzene | 1.03 | 0.65 | 616 | 116 | 64 |
aTheoretical value
bMeasured by mercury intrusion [48]
cMeasured by BET
dMeasured by infrared balance [48]
e Values from supplier
Catalytic activity and regioselectivity of TLL immobilized on different hydrophobic supports
| Supports for immobilization | Ethanolysis of oil: μmols/min /gram of biocatalyst | Regioselectivity |
|---|---|---|
| Sepabeads C18 | 0.7 | No selectivity |
| Purolite C18 | 0.6 | No selectivity |
| Lewatit DVB | 0.4 | 1,3-regioselective |
| Purolite DVB | 0.3 | 1,3-regioselective |
| Commercial derivative | 0.25 | No selectivity |
Catalytic activity and regioselectivity of TLL immobilized on Purolite C18 under different experimental conditions
| Immobilization conditions | Ethanolysis of oil: μmols/min/ | Regioselectivity |
|---|---|---|
| pH 5; no CTAB; 4 °C | 0.5 | No selectivity |
| pH 7, no CTAB; 25 °C | 0.6 | No selectivity |
| pH 7; with CTAB; 25 °C | 0.8 | No selectivity |
| pH 8.5; no CTAB; 30 °C | 0.8 | No selectivity |
| pH 8.5; with CTAB; 30 °C | 2.5 | 1,3-regioselectivity |
Fig. 5Time course of ethanolysis reaction of HOS- oil performed with TLL immobilized at 25 °C and pH 7.0 in the absence of CTAB on Sepabeads C18 (a) and Purolite DVB (b). Symbols: FAEE (filled circle); TG (unfilled circle); 2-MAG (filled square); DG (filled triangle)
Fig. 6Time course of ethanolysis reaction of HOS- oil performed with TLL immobilized on Purolite C18 at pH 8.5, 30 °C with CTAB (a) and at pH 5.0, 4 °C without CTAB (b). Symbols: FAEE (filled circle); TG (unfilled circle); 2-MAG (filled square); DG (filled triangle). Ethanolysis was carried out using 0.1 g of fully dried derivative (20 mg TLL/g support). A volume of 0.6 mL of anhydrous ethanol (5.2 mM) and 1.2 mL of sunflower oil (0.65 mM) were added in order to start the ethanolysis reaction. The reaction was carried out at 40 °C and the reaction suspension was stirred in an orbital shaker at 150 rpm. The course of the reaction was analyzed by RP-HPLC
Fig. 7Effect of the Sepabeads C18 in the acyl migration. Symbols: FAEE production by TLL immobilized on Sepabeads C18 (dash line and filled circle); 2-MAG concentration in the presence of active TLL immobilized on Sepabeads C18 (unfilled circle); 2-MAG concentration in the presence of inactivated Sepabeads C18 TLL derivative (filled triangle); and 2-MAG concentration in the presence of Sepabeads C18 without TLL (unfilled triangle). Ethanolysis was carried out using 0.1 g of fully dried support with (20 mg TLL/g support) or without TLL. A volume of 0.6 mL of anhydrous ethanol (5.2 mM) and 1.2 mL of 2-monoolein (0.65 mM) were added in order to start the ethanolysis. The reaction was carried out at 40 °C and the reaction suspension was stirred in an orbital shaker at 150 rpm. 0.65 mM was considered as 100%. The course of the reaction was analyzed by RP-HPLC
Fig. 8Time-course inactivation of TLL immobilized on Sepabeads C18 in anhydrous medium (hexane) at 40 °C