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Development of novel robust nanobiocatalyst for detergents formulations and the other applications of alkaline protease
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2016-05-01
Sprache
English
Institut
TORE-URI
Volume
39
Issue
5
Start Page
793
End Page
805
Citation
Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering 5 (39): 793-805 (2016-05-01)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Alkaline protease from alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. NPST-AK15 was immobilized onto functionalized and non-functionalized rattle-type magnetic core@mesoporous shell silica (RT-MCMSS) nanoparticles by physical adsorption and covalent attachment. However, the covalent attachment approach was superior for NPST-AK15 protease immobilization onto the activated RT-MCMSS-NH2 nanoparticles and was used for further studies. In comparison to free protease, the immobilized enzyme exhibited a shift in the optimal temperature and pH from 60 to 65 °C and pH 10.5–11.0, respectively. While free protease was completely inactivated after treatment for 1 h at 60 °C, the immobilized enzyme maintained 66.5 % of its initial activity at similar conditions. The immobilized protease showed higher kcat and Km, than the soluble enzyme by about 1.3-, and 1.2-fold, respectively. In addition, the results revealed significant improvement of NPST-AK15 protease stability in variety of organic solvents, surfactants, and commercial laundry detergents, upon immobilization onto activated RT-MCMSS-NH2 nanoparticles. Importantly, the immobilized protease maintained significant catalytic efficiency for ten consecutive reaction cycles, and was separated easily from the reaction mixture using an external magnetic field. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report about protease immobilization onto rattle-type magnetic core@mesoporous shell silica nanoparticles that also defied activity-stability tradeoff. The results clearly suggest that the developed immobilized enzyme system is a promising nanobiocatalyst for various bioprocess applications requiring a protease.
Subjects
Alkaliphiles
Enzyme immobilization
Nanobiotechnology
Proteases
Rattle-type magnetic core@mesoporous shell silica nanoparticles