| Literature DB >> 33973097 |
Pedro L Arruebo-Rivera1, Freddy Castillo-Alfonso1,2, Amanda Troya1,3, Yosberto Cárdenas-Moreno1,4, Patricia Pérez-Ramos3, Jorge González-Bacerio5, José M Guisán Seijas6, Alberto Del Monte-Martínez7.
Abstract
Protein immobilization by electrostatic adsorption to a support could represent a good option. On the other hand, lysozyme (EC 3.2.1.17) is a little and basic protein. The objective of this work was to test the functionality of the strategy of Rational Design of Immobilized Derivatives for the immobilization by electrostatic adsorption of egg white lysozyme on SP-Sepharose FastFlow support. The RDID1.0 software was used to predict the superficial lysozyme clusters, the electrostatic configuration probability for each cluster, and the theoretical and estimated maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized. In addition, immobilization was performed and the experimental parameter practical maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized and the enzymatic activity of the immobilized derivative were assessed. The estimated maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized (9.49 protein mg/support g) was close to the experimental practical maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized (14.73 ± 0.09 protein mg/support g). The enzymatic activity assay with the chitosan substrate showed the catalytic functionality of the lysozyme-SP-Sepharose immobilized derivative (35.85 ± 3.07 U/support g), which preserved 78% functional activity. The used algorithm to calculate the estimated maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized works for other proteins, porous solid supports and immobilization methods, and this parameter has a high predictive value, useful for obtaining optimum immobilized derivatives. The applied methodology is valid to predict the most probable protein-support configurations and their catalytic competences, which concur with the experimental results. The produced biocatalyst had a high retention of functional activity. This indicates its functionality in enzymatic bioconversion processes.Entities:
Keywords: Experimental validation; Immobilization by electrostatic adsorption; Maximum quantity of protein to be immobilized; Modeling of algorithms; Most probable configuration; Protein loading study
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33973097 DOI: 10.1007/s10930-021-09992-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein J ISSN: 1572-3887 Impact factor: 2.371