Literature DB >> 29895870

Spatially confined lignin nanospheres for biocatalytic ester synthesis in aqueous media.

Mika Henrikki Sipponen1, Muhammad Farooq2, Jari Koivisto3, Alessandro Pellis4, Jani Seitsonen5, Monika Österberg6.   

Abstract

Dehydration reactions proceed readily in water-filled biological cells. Development of biocatalysts that mimic such compartmentalized reactions has been cumbersome due to the lack of low-cost nanomaterials and associated technologies. Here we show that cationic lignin nanospheres function as activating anchors for hydrolases, and enable aqueous ester synthesis by forming spatially confined biocatalysts upon self-assembly and drying-driven aggregation in calcium alginate hydrogel. Spatially confined microbial cutinase and lipase retain 97% and 70% of their respective synthetic activities when the volume ratio of water to hexane increases from 1:1 to 9:1 in the reaction medium. The activity retention of industrially most frequently used acrylic resin-immobilized Candida antarctica lipase B is only 51% under similar test conditions. Overall, our findings enable fabrication of robust renewable biocatalysts for aqueous ester synthesis, and provide insight into the compartmentalization of diverse heterogeneous catalysts.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29895870      PMCID: PMC5997711          DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04715-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Commun        ISSN: 2041-1723            Impact factor:   14.919


Introduction

Enzymatic catalysis continues to open new pathways to site and stereoselective transformation and synthesis of bioactive substances, fine chemicals, and polymers[1,2]. One of the advantages of biocatalysis is the possibility to use mild reaction conditions and aqueous reaction media. In contrast to the compartmentalized ester synthesis within water-filled biological cells, essentially all of the literature on immobilization of industrial hydrolases such as microbial lipases[3] and cutinases[4] involves physical or chemical surface-binding to synthetic materials[5-10]. Adsorption on solid carriers increases the activity and stability of lipases[11,12], but it also exposes enzymes to water. This has been a major hurdle for aqueous synthesis of short-chain esters. In turn, water-immiscible substrates have prevailed in lipase-catalyzed ester synthesis in microaqueous[13,14], aqueous biphasic[15], and aqueous emulsion[16-18] media. However, the ability to synthesize short-chain esters and polymers in water could potentially revolutionize industrial biocatalysis. For instance, esterification of organic substances arising from thermochemical biomass conversion and microbial fermentations would facilitate phase separation and circumvent the energy-intensive distillation of dilute aqueous solutions. Recent reports on the spatial confinement of proteins[19-21] encourage development of compartmentalized biocatalytic materials for condensation reactions in the presence of water. Here, we address this challenge by fabricating spatially confined biocatalysts upon self-assembly and drying-driven aggregation of enzyme-cationic lignin nanosphere (c-CLP) complexes in calcium alginate hydrogel. We use colloidal lignin particles (CLPs) as low-cost enzyme carriers because these spherical nanoparticles offer large specific surface area for adsorbing proteins[22], their scalable production does not require chemical modification[23], and physical adsorption suffices for surface functionalization[22,24]. Contrary to earlier reports[9,25-27], our immobilization method does not require covalent cross-linking to the support or synthetic polymers to stabilize lipases. Our results show that the spatially confined Lipase M from Mucor javanicus and Humicola insolens cutinase (HiC) exhibit unique efficiency and stability in the synthesis of butyl butyrate under a marked water excess.

Results

Fabrication of spatially confined biocatalysts

The procedure for enzyme immobilization (Fig. 1a) began with a two-step adsorption process starting from CLPs. Detailed characterization of original and modified softwood kraft lignin (SKL) used in this work is available in the Supplementary Note 1 (see Supplementary Tables 1, 2 and Supplementary Figs. 1‒3). A typical appearance of an aqueous CLP dispersion and single CLP particles (Z-average particle diameter=177 ± 2 nm, PdI = 0.10) is shown in Fig. 1b‒d while the ζ-potentials as a function of pH for the various compounds are shown in Fig. 1e–f. In the first step, water-soluble cationic lignin (Catlig, ζ-potential of +19 mV) adsorbed on CLPs (ζ-potential of –38 mV). In the second step, the cationic as well as the aromatic moieties of c-CLPs adsorbed 91% (Supplementary Fig. 4) of the available Lipase M (M = 33 kDa, Supplementary Fig. 5). The process was completed by entrapping the enzyme-c-CLP complexes in calcium alginate and drying at room temperature, forming durable beads that did not re-swell in aqueous buffer solutions, except when using 0.2 M sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7 (Supplementary Fig. 6). Electron microscopy images revealed clusters of cationic lignin nanospheres at cross sections of dried beads (see Supplementary Fig. 7 in Supplementary Note 3). The overall mass balance showed that the yield of the alginate beads was 90 ± 8% on dry weight basis (Supplementary Table 4), while the protein mass balance indicated an enzyme immobilization efficiency of 96% (Supplementary Fig. 4). Alterations of this basic procedure consisted of entrapping Lipase M in calcium alginate alone or with various surface-active materials.
Fig. 1

Spatial confinement of enzymes utilizing colloidal lignin particles. a Scheme of the enzyme immobilization process comprising (i) Adsorption of cationic lignin on CLPs to yield c-CLPs. (ii) Adsorption of hydrolases on c-CLPs. (iii) Entrapment of enzyme-c-CLP complexes in calcium alginate hydrogel, and (iv) Consolidation of the alginate beads by evaporation of water under ambient conditions. b Photographic, c TEM, and d AFM images of CLPs. Scale bars: a = 1 mm, c, d = 50 nm. e ζ-potentials of the biomaterials as a function of pH. Error bars represent two standard deviations from the mean values (three measurements on a single replicate, except for Catlig six measurements on two replicates). f ζ-potential distributions of CLPs and c-CLPs

Spatial confinement of enzymes utilizing colloidal lignin particles. a Scheme of the enzyme immobilization process comprising (i) Adsorption of cationic lignin on CLPs to yield c-CLPs. (ii) Adsorption of hydrolases on c-CLPs. (iii) Entrapment of enzyme-c-CLP complexes in calcium alginate hydrogel, and (iv) Consolidation of the alginate beads by evaporation of water under ambient conditions. b Photographic, c TEM, and d AFM images of CLPs. Scale bars: a = 1 mm, c, d = 50 nm. e ζ-potentials of the biomaterials as a function of pH. Error bars represent two standard deviations from the mean values (three measurements on a single replicate, except for Catlig six measurements on two replicates). f ζ-potential distributions of CLPs and c-CLPs

Biocatalytic synthesis of butyl butyrate in aqueous media

Butanol and butyric acid are well-suited substrates to assess the aqueous esterification reaction because unlike these water-soluble metabolites of bacterial fermentation, the produced butyl butyrate is insoluble in water. The adsorption-entrapment immobilization method described above was found superior when compared to our initial attempts with layer-by-layer immobilized Lipase M (see Supplementary Figs. 8, 9 in Supplementary Note 4). The molar yield of butyl butyrate reached 77% in 96 h in the reaction catalyzed by spatially confined Lipase M (adsorbed on c-CLPs prior to the entrapment in calcium alginate). Products accumulated linearly up to 24 h reaction time, while increasing the catalyst dosing by a factor of three increased the 48 h molar yield by only 19% (Supplementary Fig. 9c). Importantly, the reaction yield after the first 24 h reaction (37%) was three times as high as that obtained when alginate beads contained Lipase M alone (Fig. 2a). Further, in the presence of c-CLPs there was a mere 3% reduction in the synthetic activity after the first reaction step compared to a drastic activity loss of 41% without c-CLPs.
Fig. 2

Enzymatic butyl butyrate synthesis. a, b Five repeated 24 h reactions catalyzed by Lipase M entrapped in calcium alginate alone or with CLPs, c-CLPs, SKL, water-soluble cationic lignin (Catlig), Tween 80, DDMA, or sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). c A structure model of cationic lignin[24]. d Relative synthetic activity (the ratio of synthetic activity in hexane-water 1:9 v/v to the activity detected in hexane-water 1:1 v/v) of immobilized hydrolases. The reaction conditions in a, b and d were similar (40 °C, pH 3, 200 rpm agitation). Error bars represent two standard deviations from the mean values (two replicates on a single batch of biocatalyst, except for c-CLP in a six replicates (three biocatalyst batches) for the first reaction, and four replicates (two biocatalyst batches) for the reactions 2‒5). Asterisks in d indicate statistically significant differences (p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s HSD test). Details of ANOVA associated with a, b are given in Supplementary Table 5

Enzymatic butyl butyrate synthesis. a, b Five repeated 24 h reactions catalyzed by Lipase M entrapped in calcium alginate alone or with CLPs, c-CLPs, SKL, water-soluble cationic lignin (Catlig), Tween 80, DDMA, or sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). c A structure model of cationic lignin[24]. d Relative synthetic activity (the ratio of synthetic activity in hexane-water 1:9 v/v to the activity detected in hexane-water 1:1 v/v) of immobilized hydrolases. The reaction conditions in a, b and d were similar (40 °C, pH 3, 200 rpm agitation). Error bars represent two standard deviations from the mean values (two replicates on a single batch of biocatalyst, except for c-CLP in a six replicates (three biocatalyst batches) for the first reaction, and four replicates (two biocatalyst batches) for the reactions 2‒5). Asterisks in d indicate statistically significant differences (p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s HSD test). Details of ANOVA associated with a, b are given in Supplementary Table 5 Our hypothesis was that the previously found beneficial amphiphilic properties of c-CLPs in emulsion stabilization[24] were important in the present work as well. To assess activation by surfactants[28-30], we entrapped Lipase M in calcium alginate with Catlig, nonionic Tween 80, anionic SDS, and cationic didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDMA) surfactants (0.6% of the dry weight of alginate beads and 10% relative to the dry weight of lipase M). Tween 80 performed best among the surfactants, but after two repeated 24 h reactions the reaction yield dropped to a half of that achieved with the beads containing Catlig (Fig. 2b). SDS inhibited Lipase M, as previously found in olive oil hydrolysis[24]. The superior reaction yields obtained with the biocatalysts containing Catlig suggests that its aromatic three-dimensional structure with multiple cationic and anionic sites is beneficial (Fig. 2c). The synthetic reaction was carried out at pH 3, and under these conditions c-CLPs are cationic (ζ-potential of +15 mV, Fig. 1c) while Lipase M is slightly anionic (ζ-potential of −2.2 mV). Therefore, c-CLPs are feasible anchors for the entrapped anionic hydrolases, retaining them in the solid matrix. The use of Bu-CLPs instead of regular CLPs, or replacement of one third of the amount of CLPs with hydrophobic spherical Carnauba wax particles[31], did not increase the esterification activity (Supplementary Fig. 10a). Probably the particle size is more important. CLPs were smaller than Bu-CLPs or wax particles (Supplementary Fig. 10d) and thus provided a larger net surface area for lipase immobilization. To generalize the benefits of the developed immobilization method, we entrapped microbial cutinases (HiC) in alginate beads with c-CLPs or Tween 80. These biocatalysts gave equally high 73‒77% molar yields of butyl butyrate in 24 h biphasic reactions (Supplementary Fig. 11). It is also important to minimize the amount of organic solvent in the aqueous ester synthesis during a reactive extraction process. For this, we determined the retention of synthetic activity when the water content of the reaction medium was significantly increased. The enzymes were dosed based on their hydrolytic activities (see Supplementary Note 2, Supplementary Table 3). Spatially confined HiC and Lipase M retained 70 and 97% of their synthetic activities, respectively, upon increasing the volume ratio of water to hexane from 1:1 to 9:1 (Fig. 2d). These values are considerably higher than the 51% activity retention of acrylic resin-immobilized CALB, the state-of-the-art industrial lipase, under the corresponding conditions. These results represent an important step towards circumventing the thermodynamically disfavoring effect of water in aqueous-phase esterification[32,33]. In contrast to the present work achieving a 52% molar yield with spatially confined HiC in 24 h in the presence of the 90% volume fraction of water, prior studies in aqueous biphasic, microaqueous, or anhydrous reactions have used anhydrous organic solvents or solvent mixtures with much less water (Table 1). Yet, the reaction yields of the present work compare favorably to the earlier data. For instance, the 24 h reaction yield was 91% in hexane-water 1:1 v/v when using 80 mg (dry basis) of reusable spatially confined biocatalyst (HiC with c-CLPs, see Supplementary Table 4). Repetition of the reaction after 8 months storage of the immobilized enzymes at 4 °C gave a butyl butyrate yield of 64% (Supplementary Fig. 12a). Another benefit offered by our immobilization system is the stabilization of lipases under reaction conditions. The time required to lose one half of the catalytic activity (t1/2, Supplementary Fig. 10e) under actual reaction conditions is higher with spatially confined Lipase M (98 h) and HiC (161 h) compared to the literature values of 24‒32 h with covalently immobilized lipases[27,34]. Furthermore, the ability to carry out the reaction in the presence of the 90% volume fraction of water further stabilized Lipase M (t1/2 = 110 h).
Table 1

Comparison of reaction conditions and yields of enzymatic butyl butyrate synthesis

Reaction systemaEnzymebReactionRef.
Time (h)Yield (%)
O (heptane)Immob. Candida rugosa lipase4869 [25]
O (hexane)C. cylindracea lipase (free or immob.)9187 [14]
O (heptane)Immob. C. rugosa lipase4869 [27]
B (90%)Immob. HiC2452This work
B (50%)cImmob. HiC2491This work
B (50%)Immob. Lipase M9677This work
B (5%) R. miehei lipase 6100 [13]
Aq.Immob. C. rugosa lipase9632d [47]

aO, organic anhydrous (solvent); B biphasic (% of water); Aq., aqueous

bImmob., immobilized

cFourfold enzyme dosing compared to that in the reaction in 90% water content

dDetected after rigorous extraction that destroyed the biocatalyst

Comparison of reaction conditions and yields of enzymatic butyl butyrate synthesis aO, organic anhydrous (solvent); B biphasic (% of water); Aq., aqueous bImmob., immobilized cFourfold enzyme dosing compared to that in the reaction in 90% water content dDetected after rigorous extraction that destroyed the biocatalyst

Cationic lignin nanospheres as templates for hydrolases

Figure 3 shows schematic models and associated microscopic images of different approaches for Lipase M immobilization; with CLPs, Catlig, or c-CLPs. In the first case, adsorption on spherical lignin particles is, as such, beneficial for the activation of hydrolases, but the enzyme-coated CLPs did not form compartmentalized assemblies in alginate beads (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 5c). In the second case, water-soluble cationic lignin co-precipitated with lipases due to the electrostatic neutralization of surface charges (Fig. 3b). The entrapped Catlig-Lipase M precipitates were observed in the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) images as free and nested clusters (Fig. 3g‒j). The third and most beneficial immobilization approach builds on the positive traits of the two aforementioned systems (Fig. 3c). A key phenomenon is the self-assembly of enzyme-carrying c-CLPs in the calcium alginate hydrogel. CLSM images of acridine orange-stained sections confirmed enrichment of protein in the nanosphere assemblies (Fig. 3k–m) also observed in the SEM images (Fig. 3l).
Fig. 3

Models and microscopic images of immobilized hydrolases. a Adsorption of hydrolases on colloidal lignin particles (CLPs). b Formation of precipitates from enzymes and cationic lignin (Catlig). c Enzyme adsorption on cationic lignin nanospheres (c-CLPs), and formation of spherical clusters from enzyme-c-CLP complexes. CLSM images (d, g, i, k, m) associated with the materials in rows (a‒c) show distribution of protein on acridine orange-stained cross-sections. SEM images show distribution of CLPs (e with green coloring, f), Catlig-Lipase M precipitates (h, j), and clustered c-CLPs and Lipase M (l). Scale bars: d, g, k = 40 µm, rest = 1 µm

Models and microscopic images of immobilized hydrolases. a Adsorption of hydrolases on colloidal lignin particles (CLPs). b Formation of precipitates from enzymes and cationic lignin (Catlig). c Enzyme adsorption on cationic lignin nanospheres (c-CLPs), and formation of spherical clusters from enzyme-c-CLP complexes. CLSM images (d, g, i, k, m) associated with the materials in rows (a‒c) show distribution of protein on acridine orange-stained cross-sections. SEM images show distribution of CLPs (e with green coloring, f), Catlig-Lipase M precipitates (h, j), and clustered c-CLPs and Lipase M (l). Scale bars: d, g, k = 40 µm, rest = 1 µm The schematic mechanism in Fig. 4 visualizes the esterification reaction catalyzed by spatially confined biocatalysts. First, butanol and butyric acid diffuse into the alginate bead containing immobilized enzymes. Enzymes confined between adjacent nanospheres serve as gatekeepers for the organic reactants. The ability of the beads to resist swelling in water (Supplementary Fig. 6) means that laborious water removal by molecular sieves[35], distillation[13], or membrane reactors[36] becomes obsolete, while the surface-bound water maintained structurally important hydration shell of lipases[37]. Low aqueous solubility of the synthesized butyl butyrate[13] facilitates its diffusion into the external organic phase during agitation, which drives the reaction toward esterification. Besides butyl butyrate, other short chain esters such as methyl butyrate[15] and butyl acetate[38] can be produced enzymatically using lipases, permitting the recovery of a plethora of bio-sourced molecules from water.
Fig. 4

Schematic mechanism of the compartmentalized butyl butyrate synthesis. a The reagents diffuse from water into an alginate bead containing spatially confined enzymes. b Diffusion of the reagents into the biocatalytic clusters consisting of enzymes adsorbed on cationic lignin nanospheres. c Ester synthesis occurs in the inner space confined by the c-CLPs. Hydrolases act as gatekeepers that enhance the selective permeation of butanol and butyric acid. Hydrophobic residues are shown in red color for the HiC molecules[46]. d Diffusion of the produced butyl butyrate into the organic phase is driven by agitation that sequentially brings the biocatalyst beads to the solvent interface

Schematic mechanism of the compartmentalized butyl butyrate synthesis. a The reagents diffuse from water into an alginate bead containing spatially confined enzymes. b Diffusion of the reagents into the biocatalytic clusters consisting of enzymes adsorbed on cationic lignin nanospheres. c Ester synthesis occurs in the inner space confined by the c-CLPs. Hydrolases act as gatekeepers that enhance the selective permeation of butanol and butyric acid. Hydrophobic residues are shown in red color for the HiC molecules[46]. d Diffusion of the produced butyl butyrate into the organic phase is driven by agitation that sequentially brings the biocatalyst beads to the solvent interface

Discussion

Here we have developed spatially confined biocatalysts that enable ester synthesis in the presence of water as the major component of the solvent system. This conceptually new immobilization process represents a significant step towards enzyme-catalyzed reactive extraction of organics from dilute aqueous streams. The scalable and environmentally benign spatially confined biocatalysts may also pave the way for next generation aqueous-phase polymerization processes.

Methods

Enzyme immobilization and synthesis of nanomaterials

All lignin materials used in this work were prepared from BIOPIVA™ 100 pine kraft lignin (UPM, Finland). Cellulose nanofibril (CNF) hydrogel, CNF thin films, cationic lignin, CLPs, and carnauba wax particles (CWPs) were prepared and purified as described earlier[24,31,39]. Immobilization of hydrolases (Amano Lipase M from Mucor javanicus, Sigma-Aldrich #534803 and purified[40] Humicola insolens cutinase (HiC) Novozymes, Beijing, China) started by adsorption of 9% (w w−1) of cationic lignin on CLPs to render them cationic[24]. The second step involved adsorption of hydrolases onto the cationic lignin nanospheres. After the two 15 min adsorption steps at 22 °C with magnetic stirring at 150 rpm, the dispersion was mixed to homogeneity with aqueous sodium alginate (BDH Chemicals Ltd, UK). The colloidal mixture containing 2% (w w−1) sodium alginate was precipitated dropwise to 1.25 volumes of 0.2 M aqueous calcium chloride at room temperature to obtain beads that were washed with deionized water and dried under ambient conditions. Alterations of this basic procedure included immobilization of Lipase M alone, with surfactants, dissolved or colloidal lignin, or CWPs with and without cationic lignin.

Microscopy and particle analysis

Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of CNF thin films were captured as described in the literature[24]. For transmission electron microscope (TEM) imaging, 100 nm thick sections were cut from the alginate beads (containing Lipase M with various lignin materials) at a temperature of −100 °C using a Leica EM UC7 ultramicrotome. The thin sections were imaged using JEOL JEM-3200FSC instrument. Alginate beads embedded in epoxy resin were cut with a diamond blade to expose their cross sections for field emission-SEM (FE-SEM) and CLSM imaging. Gold/palladium sputtered cross-sections were imaged using a Zeiss Sigma FE-SEM operated at an accelerating voltage of 1.5 kV. Non-sputtered cross sections were imaged after acridine orange staining using a Leica DMRXE confocal laser scanning microscope with HCPL APO 20 × /0.70 CS and HPX PL APO 63 × /1.30 objectives. Particle size distributions and ζ potentials of various materials used in this work were analyzed in three replicates by dynamic light scattering using a Malvern Ζsizer Nano-ZS90 and Mastersizer 2000 instruments.

Characterization of enzymes and lignin

Lipase M was solubilized at 10 g l−1 in PBS buffer for SDS-PAGE analysis. The running gel contained 12% acrylamide. Hydrolytic activity was assayed in a mixture of 3 ml of tributyrin (#ACRO150882500, VWR), 2.5 ml of deionized water, and 1 ml of aqueous 200 mM Tris‒HCl buffer (pH 7.0). After 30 min vigorous stirring at 40 °C, the reactions were stopped by adding 3 ml of 95% ethanol, and the reaction vials were transferred into ice. The released butyric acid was titrated using 0.1 M NaOH with phenolphthalein as an indicator. Gel permeation chromatography of acetylated SKL followed published methodologies[24]. ATR-FTIR spectra of SKL, acetylated SKL, bytyrated SKL, and Catlig were recorded using a Mattson 3000 FTIR spectrometer (Unicam) with a GladiATR unit (PIKE Technologies). A total of 16 scans were recorded at a resolution of 2 cm−1 and bands in the region 500–1800 cm−1 were assigned[41]. Quantitative 13C and 31P NMR spectroscopy methods[42,43] were used to analyze structural moieties of lignin. HSQC spectrum of acetylated SKL (75 mg) was acquired in 0.5 ml of DMSO-d6 (#151874, Sigma-Aldrich). The Bruker pulse sequence hsqcetgpsisp.2 was used to collect 96 scans at spectral widths of 12.2 and 242 ppm, for the 13C and 1H nuclei, respectively. 13C1H correlation signals were assigned according to literature[44,45].

Enzymatic esterification reactions

Procedures used in aqueous esterification reactions are given in the Supplementary Note 5. Biphasic esterifications were carried out in air-tightly capped glass vials containing the immobilized biocatalyst, n-hexane and aqueous solution of 0.15 M n-butanol and 0.05 M n-butyric acid. For the reactions in 1:1 solvent ratio, 2.5 ml of each liquid was used, and for the 1:9 volume ratio, 1 ml of hexane and 9 ml of the aqueous reactant solution were used, while maintaining the weight ratio of biocatalyst to reactants constant. The reaction vials were maintained at 40 °C and 200 rpm agitation in an orbital shaker. GC-FID analysis of reactants and products was made relative to isobutyl alcohol (i.s.) and utilized DB-WAXetr (30 m, 0.32 mm i.d., 1 μm film thickness) column from Agilent Technologies Inc., heated at 30 ml min−1 from 80 to 200 °C. The injection volume was 0.5 μl and the split ratio was 1:20. One-way ANOVA and Tukey’s HSD posthoc test (n = 2, except for c-CLP n = 4‒6) were performed in Statistix 9 to deduce statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) in data presented in Fig. 2a, b, d (see Supplementary Note 6).

Data availability

The GC-FID, 31P NMR, and 13C NMR data that support the findings of this study are available in figshare repository at 10.6084/m9.figshare.5552584. Other data is available from the authors upon reasonable request.
  29 in total

1.  Immobilization of lipase on chitin and its use in nonconventional biocatalysis.

Authors:  Fabrício M Gomes; Ernandes B Pereira; Heizir F de Castro
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2004 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 6.988

2.  Physical and chemical adsorption of Mucor javanicus lipase on SBA-15 mesoporous silica. Synthesis, structural characterization, and activity performance.

Authors:  Andrea Salis; Daniela Meloni; Stefania Ligas; Maria F Casula; Maura Monduzzi; Vincenzo Solinas; Emil Dumitriu
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2005-06-07       Impact factor: 3.882

Review 3.  Immobilization of lipases by selective adsorption on hydrophobic supports.

Authors:  R Fernandez-Lafuente; P Armisén; P Sabuquillo; G Fernández-Lorente; J M Guisán
Journal:  Chem Phys Lipids       Date:  1998-06       Impact factor: 3.329

Review 4.  Which properties of cutinases are important for applications?

Authors:  Antti Nyyssölä
Journal:  Appl Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2015-05-19       Impact factor: 4.813

5.  Interfacial activation of lipases on hydrophobic support and application in the synthesis of a lubricant ester.

Authors:  Jaquelinne J Bassi; Larissa M Todero; Flávia A P Lage; Gabrielly I Khedy; Jamile Dell Ducas; Ana Paula Custódio; Marilene A Pinto; Adriano A Mendes
Journal:  Int J Biol Macromol       Date:  2016-07-29       Impact factor: 6.953

6.  Alginate as immobilization matrix and stabilizing agent in a two-phase liquid system: application in lipase-catalysed reactions.

Authors:  S Hertzberg; L Kvittingen; T Anthonsen; G Skjåk-Braek
Journal:  Enzyme Microb Technol       Date:  1992-01       Impact factor: 3.493

7.  Lipase in biphasic alginate beads as a biocatalyst for esterification of butyric acid and butanol in aqueous media.

Authors:  Choong Hey Ng; Kun-Lin Yang
Journal:  Enzyme Microb Technol       Date:  2015-10-17       Impact factor: 3.493

8.  Thermodynamic and structural investigation of the specific SDS binding of Humicola insolens cutinase.

Authors:  David Kold; Zbigniew Dauter; Anne K Laustsen; Andrzej M Brzozowski; Johan P Turkenburg; Anders D Nielsen; Heidi Koldsø; Evamaria Petersen; Birgit Schiøtt; Leonardo De Maria; Keith S Wilson; Allan Svendsen; Reinhard Wimmer
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2014-06-16       Impact factor: 6.725

9.  Tuning membrane protein mobility by confinement into nanodomains.

Authors:  Andreas Karner; Benedikt Nimmervoll; Birgit Plochberger; Enrico Klotzsch; Andreas Horner; Denis G Knyazev; Roland Kuttner; Klemens Winkler; Lukas Winter; Christine Siligan; Nicole Ollinger; Peter Pohl; Johannes Preiner
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2016-11-14       Impact factor: 39.213

10.  Biocatalytic site- and enantioselective oxidative dearomatization of phenols.

Authors:  Summer A Baker Dockrey; April L Lukowski; Marc R Becker; Alison R H Narayan
Journal:  Nat Chem       Date:  2017-11-13       Impact factor: 24.427

View more
  19 in total

Review 1.  Towards sustainable production and utilization of plant-biomass-based nanomaterials: a review and analysis of recent developments.

Authors:  J Y Zhu; Umesh P Agarwal; Peter N Ciesielski; Michael E Himmel; Runan Gao; Yulin Deng; Maria Morits; Monika Österberg
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2021-05-06       Impact factor: 6.040

2.  Surface Gelatin-Coated β-Mannanase-Immobilized Lignin for Delayed Release of β-Mannanase to Remediate Guar-Based Fracturing Fluid Damage.

Authors:  Haonan Cong; Zihao Ma; Meixi Hu; Junjie Han; Xing Wang; Ying Han; Yao Li; Guangwei Sun
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-04-01

3.  Lignin nanoparticles are renewable and functional platforms for the concanavalin a oriented immobilization of glucose oxidase-peroxidase in cascade bio-sensing.

Authors:  Eliana Capecchi; Davide Piccinino; Elisabetta Tomaino; Bruno Mattia Bizzarri; Francesca Polli; Riccarda Antiochia; Franco Mazzei; Raffaele Saladino
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2020-08-05       Impact factor: 4.036

4.  Lignin-Based Spherical Structures and Their Use for Improvement of Cilazapril Stability in Solid State.

Authors:  Małgorzata Stanisz; Łukasz Klapiszewski; Dariusz T Mlynarczyk; Beata J Stanisz; Teofil Jesionowski
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-07-09       Impact factor: 4.411

Review 5.  Lignin-Derived Biomaterials for Drug Release and Tissue Engineering.

Authors:  Markus Witzler; Abla Alzagameem; Michel Bergs; Basma El Khaldi-Hansen; Stephanie E Klein; Dorothee Hielscher; Birgit Kamm; Judith Kreyenschmidt; Edda Tobiasch; Margit Schulze
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2018-07-27       Impact factor: 4.411

6.  Natural Shape-Retaining Microcapsules With Shells Made of Chitosan-Coated Colloidal Lignin Particles.

Authors:  Tao Zou; Mika H Sipponen; Monika Österberg
Journal:  Front Chem       Date:  2019-05-22       Impact factor: 5.221

7.  Design of stable magnetic hybrid nanoparticles of Si-entrapped HRP.

Authors:  Sonali Correa; Sara Puertas; Lucía Gutiérrez; Laura Asín; Jesús Martínez de la Fuente; Valeria Grazú; Lorena Betancor
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  Lignin for Nano- and Microscaled Carrier Systems: Applications, Trends, and Challenges.

Authors:  Mika Henrikki Sipponen; Heiko Lange; Claudia Crestini; Alexander Henn; Monika Österberg
Journal:  ChemSusChem       Date:  2019-05-10       Impact factor: 8.928

Review 9.  Lignin Nanoparticles and Their Nanocomposites.

Authors:  Zhao Zhang; Vincent Terrasson; Erwann Guénin
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-19       Impact factor: 5.076

10.  Lignocellulosic Biomass as Source for Lignin-Based Environmentally Benign Antioxidants.

Authors:  Abla Alzagameem; Basma El Khaldi-Hansen; Dominik Büchner; Michael Larkins; Birgit Kamm; Steffen Witzleben; Margit Schulze
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2018-10-16       Impact factor: 4.411

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.