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Industrial enzymes

Industrial enzymes are enzymes that are commercially used in a variety of industries such as pharmaceuticals, chemical production, biofuels, food & beverage, and consumer products. Due to advancements in recent years, biocatalysis through isolated enzymes is considered more economical than use of whole cells. Enzymes may be used as a unit operation within a process to generate a desired product, or may be the product of interest. Industrial biological catalysis through enzymes has experienced rapid growth in recent years due to their ability to operate at mild conditions, and exceptional chiral and positional specificity, things that traditional chemical processes lack.[1] Isolated enzymes are typically used in hydrolytic and isomerization reactions. Whole cells are typically used when a reaction requires a co-factor. Although co-factors may be generated in vitro, it is typically more cost-effective to use metabolically active cells.[1]

Enzymes as a unit of operation edit

Immobilization edit

Despite their excellent catalytic capabilities, enzymes and their properties must be improved prior to industrial implementation in many cases. Some aspects of enzymes that must be improved prior to implementation are stability, activity, inhibition by reaction products, and selectivity towards non-natural substrates. This may be accomplished through immobilization of enzymes on a solid material, such as a porous support.[2] Immobilization of enzymes greatly simplifies the recovery process, enhances process control, and reduces operational costs. Many immobilization techniques exist, such as adsorption, covalent binding, affinity, and entrapment.[3] Ideal immobilization processes should not use highly toxic reagents in the immobilization technique to ensure stability of the enzymes.[4] After immobilization is complete, the enzymes are introduced into a reaction vessel for biocatalysis.

Adsorption edit

Enzyme adsorption onto carriers functions based on chemical and physical phenomena such as van der Waals forces, ionic interactions, and hydrogen bonding. These forces are weak, and as a result, do not affect the structure of the enzyme. A wide variety of enzyme carriers may be used. Selection of a carrier is dependent upon the surface area, particle size, pore structure, and type of functional group.[5]

Covalent binding edit

 
Example of Enzyme Immobilization through Covalent Binding

Many binding chemistries may be used to adhere an enzyme to a surface to varying degrees of success. The most successful covalent binding techniques include binding via glutaraldehyde to amino groups and N-hydroxysuccinide esters. These immobilization techniques occur at ambient temperatures in mild conditions, which have limited potential to modify the structure and function of the enzyme.[6]

Affinity edit

Immobilization using affinity relies on the specificity of an enzyme to couple an affinity ligand to an enzyme to form a covalently bound enzyme-ligand complex. The complex is introduced into a support matrix for which the ligand has high binding affinity, and the enzyme is immobilized through ligand-support interactions.[3]

Entrapment edit

Immobilization using entrapment relies on trapping enzymes within gels or fibers, using non-covalent interactions. Characteristics that define a successful entrapping material include high surface area, uniform pore distribution, tunable pore size, and high adsorption capacity.[3]

Recovery edit

Enzymes typically constitute a significant operational cost for industrial processes, and in many cases, must be recovered and reused to ensure economic feasibility of a process. Although some biocatalytic processes operate using organic solvents, the majority of processes occur in aqueous environments, improving the ease of separation.[1] Most biocatalytic processes occur in batch, differentiating them from conventional chemical processes. As a result, typical bioprocesses employ a separation technique after bioconversion. In this case, product accumulation may cause inhibition of enzyme activity. Ongoing research is performed to develop in situ separation techniques, where product is removed from the batch during the conversion process. Enzyme separation may be accomplished through solid-liquid extraction techniques such as centrifugation or filtration, and the product-containing solution is fed downstream for product separation.[1]

Enzymes as a Unit Operation
Enzyme Industry Application
Palatase[7] Food Enhance cheese flavor
Lipozyme TL IM[7] Food Interesterification of vegetable oil
Lipase AK Amano[7] Pharmaceutical Synthesis of chiral compounds
Lipopan F[7] Food Emulsifier
Cellulase[8] Biofuel Class of enzymes that degrade cellulose to glucose monomers
Amylase[9] Food/biofuel Class of enzymes that degrade starch to glucose monomers
Xylose isomerase[10] Food High-fructose corn syrup production
Resinase[7] Paper Pitch control in paper processing
Penicillin amidase[11] Pharmaceutical Synthetic antibiotic production
Amidase Chemical Class of enzymes used for non-proteinogenic enantiomerically pure amino acid production

Enzymes as a desired product edit

To industrialize an enzyme, the following upstream and downstream enzyme production processes are considered:

Upstream edit

Upstream processes are those that contribute to the generation of the enzyme.

Selection of a suitable enzyme edit

An enzyme must be selected based upon the desired reaction. The selected enzyme defines the required operational properties, such as pH, temperature, activity, and substrate affinity.[12]

Identification and selection of a suitable source for the selected enzyme edit

The choice of a source of enzymes is an important step in the production of enzymes. It is common to examine the role of enzymes in nature and how they relate to the desired industrial process. Enzymes are most commonly sourced through bacteria, fungi, and yeast. Once the source of the enzyme is selected, genetic modifications may be performed to increase the expression of the gene responsible for producing the enzyme.[12]

Process development edit

Process development is typically performed after genetic modification of the source organism, and involves the modification of the culture medium and growth conditions. In many cases, process development aims to reduce mRNA hydrolysis and proteolysis.[12]

Large scale production edit

Scaling up of enzyme production requires optimization of the fermentation process. Most enzymes are produced under aerobic conditions, and as a result, require constant oxygen input, impacting fermenter design. Due to variations in the distribution of dissolved oxygen, as well as temperature, pH, and nutrients, the transport phenomena associated with these parameters must be considered. The highest possible productivity of the fermenter is achieved at maximum transport capacity of the fermenter.[12][13]

Downstream edit

Downstream processes are those that contribute to separation or purification of enzymes.

Removal of insoluble materials and recovery of enzymes from the source edit

The procedures for enzyme recovery depend on the source organism, and whether enzymes are intracellular or extracellular. Typically, intracellular enzymes require cell lysis and separation of complex biochemical mixtures. Extracellular enzymes are released into the culture medium, and are much simpler to separate. Enzymes must maintain their native conformation to ensure their catalytic capability. Since enzymes are very sensitive to pH, temperature, and ionic strength of the medium, mild isolation conditions must be used.[12]

Concentration and primary purification of enzymes edit

Depending on the intended use of the enzyme, different levels purity are required. For example, enzymes used for diagnostic purposes must be separated to a higher purity than bulk industrial enzymes to prevent catalytic activity that provides erroneous results. Enzymes used for therapeutic purposes typically require the most rigorous separation. Most commonly, a combination of chromatography steps is employed for separation.[12]

The purified enzymes are either sold in pure form and sold to other industries, or added to consumer goods.

Enzymes as a Desired Product
Enzyme Industry Application
Novozym-435[7] Consumer Goods Isopropyl myristate production (Cosmetic)
Bromelain[14] Food Meat tenderizer
Noopazyme[7] Food Improve noodle quality
Asparaginase[15] Pharmaceutical Lymphatic cancer therapeutic
Ficin[16] Pharmaceutical Digestive aid
Urokinase[17] Pharmaceutical Anticoagulant
β-Lactamase Pharmaceutical Penicillin allergy treatment
Subtilisin[18] Consumer Goods Laundry detergent

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Schmid, A.; Dordick, J. S.; Hauer, B.; Kiener, A.; Wubbolts, M.; Witholt, B. (2001). "Industrial biocatalysis today and tomorrow". Nature. 409 (6817): 258–268. doi:10.1038/35051736. PMID 11196655. S2CID 4340563.
  2. ^ Mateo, Car; Fernandez-Lorente, Gloria; Guisan, Jose; Fernandez-Lafuente, Roberto (2007). "Improvement of enzyme activity, stability and selectivity via immobilization techniques". Enzyme and Microbial Technology. 40 (6): 1451–1463. doi:10.1016/j.enzmictec.2007.01.018.
  3. ^ a b c Datta, Sumitra; Christena, L. Rene; Rajaram, Yamuna Rani Sriramulu (2017-04-17). "Enzyme immobilization: an overview on techniques and support materials". 3 Biotech. 3 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1007/s13205-012-0071-7. ISSN 2190-5738. PMC 3563746. PMID 28324347.
  4. ^ Guisan, Jose (2006). Immobilization of Enzymes and Cells. Springer Science & Business Media.
  5. ^ Jesionowski, Teofil; Zdarta, Jakub; Krajewska, Barbara (2014-08-01). "Enzyme immobilization by adsorption: a review". Adsorption. 20 (5–6): 801–821. doi:10.1007/s10450-014-9623-y. ISSN 0929-5607.
  6. ^ Walker, John (1988). Methods in Molecular Biology - New Protein Techniques. Humana Press. pp. 495–499.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Houde, Alain; Kademi, Ali; Leblanc, Danielle (2004-07-01). "Lipases and their industrial applications: an overview". Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology. 118 (1–3): 155–170. doi:10.1385/ABAB:118:1-3:155. ISSN 0273-2289. PMID 15304746. S2CID 10528621.
  8. ^ Sun, Ye; Cheng, Jiayang (2002-05-01). "Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic materials for ethanol production: a review". Bioresource Technology. Reviews Issue. 83 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1016/S0960-8524(01)00212-7. PMID 12058826.
  9. ^ van der Maarel, Marc J. E. C; van der Veen, Bart; Uitdehaag, Joost C. M; Leemhuis, Hans; Dijkhuizen, L (2002-03-28). "Properties and applications of starch-converting enzymes of the α-amylase family". Journal of Biotechnology. 94 (2): 137–155. doi:10.1016/S0168-1656(01)00407-2. PMID 11796168.
  10. ^ Bhosale, S. H.; Rao, M. B.; Deshpande, V. V. (1996-06-01). "Molecular and industrial aspects of glucose isomerase". Microbiological Reviews. 60 (2): 280–300. doi:10.1128/mr.60.2.280-300.1996. ISSN 0146-0749. PMC 239444. PMID 8801434.
  11. ^ Buchholz, Klaus (2016-05-01). "A breakthrough in enzyme technology to fight penicillin resistance—industrial application of penicillin amidase". Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. 100 (9): 3825–3839. doi:10.1007/s00253-016-7399-6. ISSN 0175-7598. PMID 26960323. S2CID 253769410.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Sharma, Kumar; Beniwal, Vikas (2014). Industrial Enzymes: Trends, Scope, and Relevance. Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
  13. ^ Taherzadeh, Madhavan; Nampoothiri, Christian (2015). Industrial Biorefineries and White Biotechnology. Elsevier B.V. ISBN 978-0-444-63453-5.
  14. ^ Bekhit, Alaa A.; Hopkins, David L.; Geesink, Geert; Bekhit, Adnan A.; Franks, Philip (2014-01-01). "Exogenous Proteases for Meat Tenderization". Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition. 54 (8): 1012–1031. doi:10.1080/10408398.2011.623247. ISSN 1040-8398. PMID 24499119. S2CID 57554.
  15. ^ Lanvers-Kaminsky, Claudia (2017-03-01). "Asparaginase pharmacology: challenges still to be faced". Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology. 79 (3): 439–450. doi:10.1007/s00280-016-3236-y. ISSN 0344-5704. PMID 28197753. S2CID 36895708.
  16. ^ González-Rábade, Nuria; Badillo-Corona, Jesús Agustín; Aranda-Barradas, Juan Silvestre; Oliver-Salvador, María del Carmen (2011-11-01). "Production of plant proteases in vivo and in vitro — A review". Biotechnology Advances. 29 (6): 983–996. doi:10.1016/j.biotechadv.2011.08.017. PMID 21889977.
  17. ^ Kotb, Essam (2014-05-01). "The biotechnological potential of fibrinolytic enzymes in the dissolution of endogenous blood thrombi". Biotechnology Progress. 30 (3): 656–672. doi:10.1002/btpr.1918. ISSN 1520-6033. PMID 24799449. S2CID 9268319.
  18. ^ "Spar Bio Laundry Tablets". Retrieved 2017-04-18.

industrial, enzymes, enzymes, that, commercially, used, variety, industries, such, pharmaceuticals, chemical, production, biofuels, food, beverage, consumer, products, advancements, recent, years, biocatalysis, through, isolated, enzymes, considered, more, eco. Industrial enzymes are enzymes that are commercially used in a variety of industries such as pharmaceuticals chemical production biofuels food amp beverage and consumer products Due to advancements in recent years biocatalysis through isolated enzymes is considered more economical than use of whole cells Enzymes may be used as a unit operation within a process to generate a desired product or may be the product of interest Industrial biological catalysis through enzymes has experienced rapid growth in recent years due to their ability to operate at mild conditions and exceptional chiral and positional specificity things that traditional chemical processes lack 1 Isolated enzymes are typically used in hydrolytic and isomerization reactions Whole cells are typically used when a reaction requires a co factor Although co factors may be generated in vitro it is typically more cost effective to use metabolically active cells 1 Contents 1 Enzymes as a unit of operation 1 1 Immobilization 1 1 1 Adsorption 1 1 2 Covalent binding 1 1 3 Affinity 1 1 4 Entrapment 1 2 Recovery 2 Enzymes as a desired product 2 1 Upstream 2 1 1 Selection of a suitable enzyme 2 1 2 Identification and selection of a suitable source for the selected enzyme 2 1 3 Process development 2 1 4 Large scale production 2 2 Downstream 2 2 1 Removal of insoluble materials and recovery of enzymes from the source 2 2 2 Concentration and primary purification of enzymes 3 See also 4 ReferencesEnzymes as a unit of operation editImmobilization edit Despite their excellent catalytic capabilities enzymes and their properties must be improved prior to industrial implementation in many cases Some aspects of enzymes that must be improved prior to implementation are stability activity inhibition by reaction products and selectivity towards non natural substrates This may be accomplished through immobilization of enzymes on a solid material such as a porous support 2 Immobilization of enzymes greatly simplifies the recovery process enhances process control and reduces operational costs Many immobilization techniques exist such as adsorption covalent binding affinity and entrapment 3 Ideal immobilization processes should not use highly toxic reagents in the immobilization technique to ensure stability of the enzymes 4 After immobilization is complete the enzymes are introduced into a reaction vessel for biocatalysis Adsorption edit Enzyme adsorption onto carriers functions based on chemical and physical phenomena such as van der Waals forces ionic interactions and hydrogen bonding These forces are weak and as a result do not affect the structure of the enzyme A wide variety of enzyme carriers may be used Selection of a carrier is dependent upon the surface area particle size pore structure and type of functional group 5 Covalent binding edit nbsp Example of Enzyme Immobilization through Covalent BindingMany binding chemistries may be used to adhere an enzyme to a surface to varying degrees of success The most successful covalent binding techniques include binding via glutaraldehyde to amino groups and N hydroxysuccinide esters These immobilization techniques occur at ambient temperatures in mild conditions which have limited potential to modify the structure and function of the enzyme 6 Affinity edit Immobilization using affinity relies on the specificity of an enzyme to couple an affinity ligand to an enzyme to form a covalently bound enzyme ligand complex The complex is introduced into a support matrix for which the ligand has high binding affinity and the enzyme is immobilized through ligand support interactions 3 Entrapment edit Immobilization using entrapment relies on trapping enzymes within gels or fibers using non covalent interactions Characteristics that define a successful entrapping material include high surface area uniform pore distribution tunable pore size and high adsorption capacity 3 Recovery edit Enzymes typically constitute a significant operational cost for industrial processes and in many cases must be recovered and reused to ensure economic feasibility of a process Although some biocatalytic processes operate using organic solvents the majority of processes occur in aqueous environments improving the ease of separation 1 Most biocatalytic processes occur in batch differentiating them from conventional chemical processes As a result typical bioprocesses employ a separation technique after bioconversion In this case product accumulation may cause inhibition of enzyme activity Ongoing research is performed to develop in situ separation techniques where product is removed from the batch during the conversion process Enzyme separation may be accomplished through solid liquid extraction techniques such as centrifugation or filtration and the product containing solution is fed downstream for product separation 1 Enzymes as a Unit OperationEnzyme Industry ApplicationPalatase 7 Food Enhance cheese flavorLipozyme TL IM 7 Food Interesterification of vegetable oilLipase AK Amano 7 Pharmaceutical Synthesis of chiral compoundsLipopan F 7 Food EmulsifierCellulase 8 Biofuel Class of enzymes that degrade cellulose to glucose monomersAmylase 9 Food biofuel Class of enzymes that degrade starch to glucose monomersXylose isomerase 10 Food High fructose corn syrup productionResinase 7 Paper Pitch control in paper processingPenicillin amidase 11 Pharmaceutical Synthetic antibiotic productionAmidase Chemical Class of enzymes used for non proteinogenic enantiomerically pure amino acid productionEnzymes as a desired product editTo industrialize an enzyme the following upstream and downstream enzyme production processes are considered Upstream edit Upstream processes are those that contribute to the generation of the enzyme Selection of a suitable enzyme edit An enzyme must be selected based upon the desired reaction The selected enzyme defines the required operational properties such as pH temperature activity and substrate affinity 12 Identification and selection of a suitable source for the selected enzyme edit The choice of a source of enzymes is an important step in the production of enzymes It is common to examine the role of enzymes in nature and how they relate to the desired industrial process Enzymes are most commonly sourced through bacteria fungi and yeast Once the source of the enzyme is selected genetic modifications may be performed to increase the expression of the gene responsible for producing the enzyme 12 Process development edit Process development is typically performed after genetic modification of the source organism and involves the modification of the culture medium and growth conditions In many cases process development aims to reduce mRNA hydrolysis and proteolysis 12 Large scale production edit Scaling up of enzyme production requires optimization of the fermentation process Most enzymes are produced under aerobic conditions and as a result require constant oxygen input impacting fermenter design Due to variations in the distribution of dissolved oxygen as well as temperature pH and nutrients the transport phenomena associated with these parameters must be considered The highest possible productivity of the fermenter is achieved at maximum transport capacity of the fermenter 12 13 Downstream edit Downstream processes are those that contribute to separation or purification of enzymes Removal of insoluble materials and recovery of enzymes from the source edit The procedures for enzyme recovery depend on the source organism and whether enzymes are intracellular or extracellular Typically intracellular enzymes require cell lysis and separation of complex biochemical mixtures Extracellular enzymes are released into the culture medium and are much simpler to separate Enzymes must maintain their native conformation to ensure their catalytic capability Since enzymes are very sensitive to pH temperature and ionic strength of the medium mild isolation conditions must be used 12 Concentration and primary purification of enzymes edit Depending on the intended use of the enzyme different levels purity are required For example enzymes used for diagnostic purposes must be separated to a higher purity than bulk industrial enzymes to prevent catalytic activity that provides erroneous results Enzymes used for therapeutic purposes typically require the most rigorous separation Most commonly a combination of chromatography steps is employed for separation 12 The purified enzymes are either sold in pure form and sold to other industries or added to consumer goods Enzymes as a Desired ProductEnzyme Industry ApplicationNovozym 435 7 Consumer Goods Isopropyl myristate production Cosmetic Bromelain 14 Food Meat tenderizerNoopazyme 7 Food Improve noodle qualityAsparaginase 15 Pharmaceutical Lymphatic cancer therapeuticFicin 16 Pharmaceutical Digestive aidUrokinase 17 Pharmaceutical Anticoagulantb Lactamase Pharmaceutical Penicillin allergy treatmentSubtilisin 18 Consumer Goods Laundry detergentSee also editIndustrial ecology Industrial fermentation Industrial microbiologyReferences edit a b c d Schmid A Dordick J S Hauer B Kiener A Wubbolts M Witholt B 2001 Industrial biocatalysis today and tomorrow Nature 409 6817 258 268 doi 10 1038 35051736 PMID 11196655 S2CID 4340563 Mateo Car Fernandez Lorente Gloria Guisan Jose Fernandez Lafuente Roberto 2007 Improvement of enzyme activity stability and selectivity via immobilization techniques Enzyme and Microbial Technology 40 6 1451 1463 doi 10 1016 j enzmictec 2007 01 018 a b c Datta Sumitra Christena L Rene Rajaram Yamuna Rani Sriramulu 2017 04 17 Enzyme immobilization an overview on techniques and support materials 3 Biotech 3 1 1 9 doi 10 1007 s13205 012 0071 7 ISSN 2190 5738 PMC 3563746 PMID 28324347 Guisan Jose 2006 Immobilization of Enzymes and Cells Springer Science amp Business Media Jesionowski Teofil Zdarta Jakub Krajewska Barbara 2014 08 01 Enzyme immobilization by adsorption a review Adsorption 20 5 6 801 821 doi 10 1007 s10450 014 9623 y ISSN 0929 5607 Walker John 1988 Methods in Molecular Biology New Protein Techniques Humana Press pp 495 499 a b c d e f g Houde Alain Kademi Ali Leblanc Danielle 2004 07 01 Lipases and their industrial applications an overview Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology 118 1 3 155 170 doi 10 1385 ABAB 118 1 3 155 ISSN 0273 2289 PMID 15304746 S2CID 10528621 Sun Ye Cheng Jiayang 2002 05 01 Hydrolysis of lignocellulosic materials for ethanol production a review Bioresource Technology Reviews Issue 83 1 1 11 doi 10 1016 S0960 8524 01 00212 7 PMID 12058826 van der Maarel Marc J E C van der Veen Bart Uitdehaag Joost C M Leemhuis Hans Dijkhuizen L 2002 03 28 Properties and applications of starch converting enzymes of the a amylase family Journal of Biotechnology 94 2 137 155 doi 10 1016 S0168 1656 01 00407 2 PMID 11796168 Bhosale S H Rao M B Deshpande V V 1996 06 01 Molecular and industrial aspects of glucose isomerase Microbiological Reviews 60 2 280 300 doi 10 1128 mr 60 2 280 300 1996 ISSN 0146 0749 PMC 239444 PMID 8801434 Buchholz Klaus 2016 05 01 A breakthrough in enzyme technology to fight penicillin resistance industrial application of penicillin amidase Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 100 9 3825 3839 doi 10 1007 s00253 016 7399 6 ISSN 0175 7598 PMID 26960323 S2CID 253769410 a b c d e f Sharma Kumar Beniwal Vikas 2014 Industrial Enzymes Trends Scope and Relevance Nova Science Publishers Inc Taherzadeh Madhavan Nampoothiri Christian 2015 Industrial Biorefineries and White Biotechnology Elsevier B V ISBN 978 0 444 63453 5 Bekhit Alaa A Hopkins David L Geesink Geert Bekhit Adnan A Franks Philip 2014 01 01 Exogenous Proteases for Meat Tenderization Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 54 8 1012 1031 doi 10 1080 10408398 2011 623247 ISSN 1040 8398 PMID 24499119 S2CID 57554 Lanvers Kaminsky Claudia 2017 03 01 Asparaginase pharmacology challenges still to be faced Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology 79 3 439 450 doi 10 1007 s00280 016 3236 y ISSN 0344 5704 PMID 28197753 S2CID 36895708 Gonzalez Rabade Nuria Badillo Corona Jesus Agustin Aranda Barradas Juan Silvestre Oliver Salvador Maria del Carmen 2011 11 01 Production of plant proteases in vivo and in vitro A review Biotechnology Advances 29 6 983 996 doi 10 1016 j biotechadv 2011 08 017 PMID 21889977 Kotb Essam 2014 05 01 The biotechnological potential of fibrinolytic enzymes in the dissolution of endogenous blood thrombi Biotechnology Progress 30 3 656 672 doi 10 1002 btpr 1918 ISSN 1520 6033 PMID 24799449 S2CID 9268319 Spar Bio Laundry Tablets Retrieved 2017 04 18 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Industrial enzymes amp oldid 1160415839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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