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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Enzyme immobilisation in biocatalysis : Why, what and how

Roger A. Sheldon, +1 more
- 08 Jul 2013 - 
- Vol. 42, Iss: 15, pp 6223-6235
TLDR
An overview of the why, what and how of enzyme immobilisation for use in biocatalysis is presented and emphasis is placed on relatively recent developments, such as the use of novel supports such as mesoporous silicas, hydrogels, and smart polymers, and cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs).
Abstract
In this tutorial review, an overview of the why, what and how of enzyme immobilisation for use in biocatalysis is presented. The importance of biocatalysis in the context of green and sustainable chemicals manufacture is discussed and the necessity for immobilisation of enzymes as a key enabling technology for practical and commercial viability is emphasised. The underlying reasons for immobilisation are the need to improve the stability and recyclability of the biocatalyst compared to the free enzyme. The lower risk of product contamination with enzyme residues and low or no allergenicity are further advantages of immobilised enzymes. Methods for immobilisation are divided into three categories: adsorption on a carrier (support), encapsulation in a carrier, and cross-linking (carrier-free). General considerations regarding immobilisation, regardless of the method used, are immobilisation yield, immobilisation efficiency, activity recovery, enzyme loading (wt% in the biocatalyst) and the physical properties, e.g. particle size and density, hydrophobicity and mechanical robustness of the immobilisate, i.e. the immobilised enzyme as a whole (enzyme + support). The choice of immobilisate is also strongly dependent on the reactor configuration used, e.g. stirred tank, fixed bed, fluidised bed, and the mode of downstream processing. Emphasis is placed on relatively recent developments, such as the use of novel supports such as mesoporous silicas, hydrogels, and smart polymers, and cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs).

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Glutaraldehyde in bio-catalysts design: a useful crosslinker and a versatile tool in enzyme immobilization

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Enzyme Stabilization by Deposition of Silicone Coatings

TL;DR: The fabrication of enzyme preparations of superb mechanical stability and outstanding stability towards leaching are reported, for the first time, obtained by deposition of silicone coatings, available from cheap silicone building blocks under simple reaction conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immobilization of thermophilic enzymes in miniaturized flow reactors.

TL;DR: An aminoacylase enzyme with potential use for industrial biotransformation reactions is used and successfully immobilized in miniaturized flow reactors and used to produce stable biocatalytic microreactors that can be used repeatedly over a period of several months.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient immobilization of epoxide hydrolase onto silica gel and use in the enantioselective hydrolysis of racemic para-nitrostyrene oxide

TL;DR: The activity of immobilized AnEH was retained for several months and the enantioselectivity of the enzyme was not altered by the immobilization reaction: both unreacted epoxide and formed diol were obtained with very high ee (99 and 92%, respectively).
Journal ArticleDOI

Enzymatic synthesis of C-terminal arylamides of amino acids and peptides.

TL;DR: The chemo-enzymatic synthesis of arylamides proved to be completely free of racemization, in contrast to the state-of-the-art chemical methods.
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