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Enzymatic modification of vegetable protein: Immobilization of Penicillium duponti enzyme on reconstituted collagen and the use of the immobilized‐enzyme complex for solubilizing vegetable protein in a recycle reactor
Author(s) -
AduAmankwa B.,
Constantinides A.,
Vieth W. R.
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
biotechnology and bioengineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.136
H-Index - 189
eISSN - 1097-0290
pISSN - 0006-3592
DOI - 10.1002/bit.260231117
Subject(s) - immobilized enzyme , chemistry , enzyme , enzyme assay , substrate (aquarium) , covalent bond , membrane , chromatography , hydrolysis , biochemistry , organic chemistry , biology , ecology
Abstract Penicillium duponti enzyme was immobilized on reconstituted collagen by macromolecular complication, impregnation, and covalent crosslinking techniques. The immobilization of the enzyme on collagen has a twofold purpose: (1) providing a protein microenvironment for the proteolytic enzyme; and (2) extending the useful life the enzyme once immobilized on the collagen matrix. Two types of collagen were used, one produced by the United States Department of Agriculture and the other produced by FMC. The USDA collagen contained unhydrolyzed telepeptide linkages and required pretreatment to reduce collagenaselike activity of the enzyme. Activity analysis of the immobilized enzyme complex showed that membranes with enzyme loading less than 10 mg enzyme/g of wet membrane in the reactor were dimensionally stable. The degree of crosslinking was an important parameter. Membranes with structural opening up to three times the initial dry thickness were found to be the maximum limit for controlled release of enzyme from the collagen membrane during enzymatic reaction. Higher activities and better stability of the enzyme in collagen membrane were found for covalent crosslinking of the enzyme to treated collagen films. The hydrolysis of soybean vegetable protein with the immobilized enzyme in a recycle reactor at enzyme loading of mg/g of wet membrane at 40°C, pH 3.4, produced 56.5% of soluble protein in 10h. The production is equivalent to 1.84 h total contact time between the substrate and the immobilized enzyme. The average productivity based on a stable enzyme activity and 20g of dry membrane was 329 mg of protein/g/mg of active enzyme immobilized. The productivity of the free enzyme in a batch reactor was 62.5 mg protein/h/mg enzyme.