Presentation Transcript
Biocatalysis in organic solvents: Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Improving enzymes by using them in organic solvents
Alexander Klibanov
NATURE (2001) 409: 241-246
www.nature.com
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
The technological utility of enzymes can be enhanced greatly by using them in organic solvents rather than in their natural aqueous reaction media
Enzymes can catalyze reactions impossible in water, become more stable and exhibit behaviour such as molecular memory
Enzymatic selectivity can be markedly affected
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Water is a poor solvent in preparative organic chemistry
Insolubility, decomposition of reagents
Large scale removal of water is tedious and expensive due to its high boiling point and high heat of evaporation
Side reactions such as hydrolysis, racemisation and polymerisation
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
New enzymatic reactions
Lipases, esterases, proteases
ester + water ï‚® acid + alcohol
In anhydrous solvents and by adding alternative nucleophiles such as alcohols, amines and thiols
transesterification, aminolysis and thiotransesterification
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Systems with organic solvents
Water and a water miscible organic solvent
Two-phase systems
PEG-modified enzymes in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Monophasic organic solvents
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Potential advantages and bottlenecks
Table 5.1 gives a summary of the potential advantages of enzymes in organic solvents
Need for guidelines what system is the best under the given circumstances
Solvent hydrophobicity
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Indicators of solvent hydrophobicity
Table 5.2
Dielectric constant
Dipole moment
Polarizability
Molar heat of vaporization (Hildebrand solubility)
Dye solvatochromism
Log P
Biocatalysis in organic solvents: Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Log P Fig. 5.2
P = [X]octanol / [X]water
most widely used indicator of solvent polarity
log P 4 intact water structure
Biocatalysis in organic solvents: Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Effects on enzyme stability
Dry enzymes are not active, but regain their activity when some water is added
Water is needed for flexibility (molecular lubricant) and essential parts of the enzyme surface must be hydrated to allow catalysis
Hydrophobic solvents leave the hydration shell of
the protein intact
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Effects on enzyme stability
Hydrophobic solvent: small redistribution of water: conservation of native protein structure
Polar solvent: stronger partitioning effect
Interaction of solvent with protein surface
Strip tightly bound water
Destruction of hydrogen bond network
Lowering of surface tension
Onset of protein unfolding
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Effects on enzyme stability
Extreme thermostability in inert solvents
Fewer side reactions (deamidation, hydrolysis)
Conformational rigidity in dehydrated state
Half-life of enzyme at high temperature drops precipitously when the water content is raised
Chymotrypsin, lipase, ribonuclease
Biocatalysis in organic solvents: Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Water-water miscible solvents
Polar solvents
detrimental to enzymes (log P < 1)
low concentrations tolerable (10-30%)
Reactant, inhibitor, increase of flexibility (rate)
Operational stability (Table 5.3)
Change in product pattern (Fig. 5.3)
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Substrate solubility
Presence of organic solvent can have a large effect on substrate solubility
A substrate with a low affinity for solvent binds strongly to the enzyme
Change in kinetic parameters (Km), S-specificity
Polar substrates have high Km in polar solvent
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Two-phase systems
About equal volumes of an aqueous solution and an immiscible organic solvent
Catalysis takes place in the aqueous phase or at the interface
[S] dependent on partition coefficient
Organic phase acts as a substrate reservoir
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Two-phase systems
[S] low, limits rate of catalysis
Product more hydrophobic than substrate:
shift in equilibrium towards product side
Interfacial area is small: limits mass transport
Agitation causes dispersion of organic solvent
in aqueous phase: enzyme inactivation
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Two-phase systems
S-specificity and catalytic activity comparable to pure water system
Traces of solvent can influence activity and stability
Enzyme recovery is difficult
Immobilisation allows reuse of biocatalyst
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
PEG-modified enzymes
Modification of lysine residues with amphipathic PEG molecules of different size
Fig. 5.5 Synthesis of organic solvent soluble enzymes
Triazine activated PEG2
Degree of modification can be controlled
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
PEG-modified enzymes
10 - 20 PEG chains per enzyme molecule
Increase in molecular mass
Creation of hydrophilic micro-environment around enzyme molecule
Protects enzyme from surrounding organic solvent and prevents stripping of essential water
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
PEG-modified enzymes
Radius hydrophilic environment up to 30 nm
due to length of PEG 5000
High enzymatic activity with water immiscible solvents
Table 5.4 Enzymatic activity in different organic solvents
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
PEG-modified enzymes
Improved storage and thermal stability
Modification of kinetic parameters
Modification of S-specificity
Partitioning of apolar substrates is unfavourable
S-diffusion needs to be sufficiently rapid
Hexane or ether precipitation: good recovery
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
PEG-modified enzymes
Fe-carboxy-PEG
Magnetic beads: easy recovery
Cost aspects of biocatalyst preparation
Medical applications
Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)
PEG-ADA stays in the blood for 1-2 weeks
Protease-resistant, not excreted by kidney
No receptor binding: no immunoresponse
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Form spontaneously when a surfactant is dispersed in an apolar solvent in the presence of a few volume percent of water
Sometimes a cosurfactant (alcohol) is required
Droplet size in the nm range, dependent on w0
Thermodynamically stable, optically transparant
Ions to proteins can be incorporated
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Collision induces content exchange
Transport between water core and organic phase allows reactions between polar and apolar compounds
Enzyme can be solubilized in different ways:
Extraction from dry powder or solvent
Injection from concentrated solution
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Enzyme location Fig. 5.6
- in water pool
- in contact with surfactant head groups
- in between the surfactant layer
Location is dependent on charge surfactant and charge distribution of the protein
Attractive membrane mimetic system
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Effects on enzyme stability
- dependent on protein properties
- restricted mobility may prevent unfolding
- encapsulation limits autolysis of proteases
- low water content increases stability
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Effects on enzyme activity
- Water content too low
- pH different from stock buffer solution due to
binding of protons or hydroxyl groups with surfactant head groups
- Unsufficient buffer capacity
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Effects on enzyme kinetics
- Partitioning effects substrates
- Increase in apparent Km
- One or a few substrate molecules per micelle
- Reversible kinetics (intramicellar [P] high)
- Collision induced exchange kinetics
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
Several features of interest for applications
- Good stability and recovery
- Solubilization of apolar compounds
- Cofactor regeneration is possible
- Major drawback: presence of surfactant
- Limits recovery and purification of apolar substances from the organic phase
Biocatalysis in organic solvents : Biocatalysis in organic solvents
Reversed micelles
No scale-up information available
- Phase diagram sensitive to T and P
- Stability in stirred tank or membrane reactor ?
- Not suitable for synthetic reactions
- Some promise for purification of enzyme from fermentation broth