Title of article :
The adsorption of multimeric enzymes on very lowly activated supports involves more enzyme subunits: Stabilization of a glutamate dehydrogenase from Thermus thermophilus by immobilization on heterofunctional supports
Author/Authors :
Juan M. Bolivar، نويسنده , , Cesar Mateo، نويسنده , , Javier Rocha-Martin، نويسنده , , Felipe Cava، نويسنده , , José Berenguer، نويسنده , , Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente، نويسنده , , José M. Guisan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
6
From page :
139
To page :
144
Abstract :
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from Thermus thermophilus is a homotrimeric enzyme that tends to dissociate at acidic pH values. GDH is readily adsorbed on highly activated anionic exchangers (HAAE), but hardly adsorbed on lowly activated supports (LAAE) or on highly activated epoxy supports. When using amino-epoxy supports, GDH immobilized on HAAE-epoxy and more slowly on LAAE-epoxy supports. Both immobilized biocatalysts were incubated at pH 10 for different times to increase the multipoint covalent attachment. LAAE-epoxy-GDH was stable at pH 4 and 25 °C, the enzyme stability did not depend on the enzyme concentration and did not release any subunit to the supernatant, in opposition to the results obtained using HAAE-epoxy supports. The general application of this strategy to stabilize multimeric enzymes was verified by immobilizing a crude protein extract. It seems that proteins adsorb on LAAE by the larger region of their surface (that is the one that involves the highest number of enzyme subunits), since it is the only area large enough to permit a multipoint ionic exchange on this LAAE. On the contrary, using HAAE, some proteins may become adsorbed by clusters that were rich in anionic groups and located in a corner of the multimer, involving only some of the subunits in the enzyme immobilization. That way, a careful design of the design of the support permits to take full advantage of the immobilization on heterofunctional supports.
Keywords :
Directed immobilization , Amino-epoxy supports , Enzyme stabilization , Anionic exchange , Tailor-made supports
Journal title :
Enzyme and Microbial Technology
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Enzyme and Microbial Technology
Record number :
1185380
Link To Document :
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