• Title/Summary/Keyword: enzyme kinetic

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Kinetic Modiling of Cyclodextrin forming Reactionin a Heterogeneous Enzyme Reaction System using Swollen Extrusion Starch (팽윤 Extrusion 전분을 기질로 한 불균일상 효소 반응계에서 Cyclodextrin 생성반응의 수치적 해석)

  • 조명진;박동찬;이용현
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.23 no.4
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    • pp.425-431
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    • 1995
  • A kinetic model of the cyclodextrin formation in a heterogeneous enzyme reaction system using swollen extrusion starch as substrate was derived emphasing the structural features of extrusion starch. The degree of gelatinization, the ratio of accessible and inaccessible portion of extrusion starch, adsorption of CGTase on swollen starch, the structural transformation during reaction, and product inhibition caused by produced CDs were considered in deriving kinetic model. Various kinetic constants were also evaluated. The derived kinetic equation was numerically simulated, which result showed that the derived kinetic equations can be used to predict the experimental data reasonably well under the various experimental conditions. Kinetic model can be utilized for the optimization of enzyme reactor and the process development for CD production from swollen extrusion starch.

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Dynamic Kinetic Resolutions and Asymmetric Transformations by Enzyme-Metal Combo Catalysis

  • Kim, Mahn-Joo;Ahn, Yang-Soo;Park, Jai-Wook
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.515-522
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    • 2005
  • Enzyme-metal combo catalysis is described as a useful methodology for the synthesis of optically active compounds. The key point of the method is the use of enzyme and metal in combination as the catalysts for the complete transformation of racemic substrates to single enantiomeric products through dynamic kinetic resolution (DKR). In this approach, enzyme acts as an enantioselective resolving catalyst and metal does as a racemizing catalyst for the efficient DKR. Three kinds of enzyme-metal combinations - lipase-ruthenium, subtilisin-ruthenium, and lipase-palladium –have been developed as the catalysts for the DKRs of racemic alcohols, esters, and amines. The scope of the combination catalysts can be extended to the asymmetric transformations of ketones, enol acetates, and ketoximes via the DKRs. In most cases studied, enzyme-metal combo catalysis provided enantiomerically-enriched products in high yields.

The Kinetic Characteristics of K228G Mutant Horse Liver Alcohol Dehydrogenase

  • Cho, Sun-Hyoung;Ryu, Ji-Won;Lee, Kang-Man
    • Archives of Pharmacal Research
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.13-17
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    • 1999
  • The kinetic constants and the reaction mechanism of the K228G mutant horse liver alcohol dehyrogenase isoenzyme E (HLADH-E) were compared to the wild-type enzyme. All the Km and Ki constants of the mutant enzyme for NAD+, ethanol, acetaldehyde and NADH were larger than those of the wild-type enzyme. The dissociation constants for the NADH and $NAD^{+}$ (Kiq and Kia) were greatly increased by 130-and 460-fold, respectively. The product inhibition patterns suggested that the reaction mechanism of the mutant enzyme was changed to Random Bi Bi. These results could attribute to the increase in the dissociation rate of coenzyme with the substitution at Lys-228 residue.

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Reaction Characteristics and Kinetic Analysis of Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Corn Gluten Meal Using Alkaline Protease (Alkaline Protease를 이용한 Corn Gluten Meal의 효소가수분해 반응특성 및 반응속도론적 분석)

  • 김성진;이은규남충희
    • KSBB Journal
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    • v.10 no.5
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    • pp.540-546
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    • 1995
  • Dry corn gluten meal of 70% protein content was enzymatically hydrolyzed by alkaline protease in a pH-state reactor. Such process variables as temperature, pH, and enzyme-to-substrate ratio were varied, and at each condition degree of hydrolysis was monitored and calculated. The ultimate degree of hydrolysis, which ranged between 25 and 28% based on gluten protein mass, was not significantly affected by the process variables. However, $50^{\circ}C$ and pH 9-10 appeared optimum. Kinetic analysis indicated enzyme deactivation was negligible during the hydrolysis, and the experimental data were near perfectly fitted to the model kinetic equation which was modified after neglecting enzyme deactivation term. The enzyme reaction was 1$100\times$ scaled up and basically the same hydrolysis performance was resulted. Amino acid analysis showed the hydrolyzate was relatively rich in glutamine/glutamic acid, leucine, and alanine at 19.6, 16.1, and 12.3 mole %, respectively.

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Application of Poly (Ethylene Glycol)-Bound NAD in Model Enzyme Reactor

  • Urabe, Itaru
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Applied Microbiology Conference
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    • 1986.12a
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    • pp.510.1-510
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    • 1986
  • Many enzymes require the participation of readily dissociable coenzymes as NAD for thir catalytic activities. The continuous utilization of the enzymes requires the retention and regeneration of the coenzymes. For this purpose, several kinds of macromolecular NAD derivatives have been prepared by covalently attaching NAD to watersoluble polymers. We have prepared poly (ethylene glycol)-bound NAD (PEG-NAD) by coupling N$\^$6/-(2-carboxyethyl)-NAD to one terminal of ${\gamma}$ $\omega$-diaminoly (ethylene glycol) (Mr 3000) with water-soluble carbodiimide. PED-NAD thus obtained has one NAD moiety located at a terminal of the linear, flexible and hydrophilic chain of poly (ethylene glycol). PED-NAD has good coenzyme activity for various dehydrogenases and is applicable in a continuous enzyme reactor. To use these macromolecular NAD derivatives in an enzyme reactor, it si necessary to understand the behavior of the system in which the reactions of dehydrogenases are coupled by the recycling of the NAD derivative. We investigated the kinetic properties of a continuous enzyme reactor containing lactate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase and PEG-NAD. The steady-state behavior of the enzyme reactor is explained by a simple kinetic model.

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Properties and Kinetics of Glutamate Dehydrogenase of Corynebacterium glutamicum (Corynebacterium glutamicum의 Glutamate Dehydrogenase의 효소학적 성질과 Kinetics)

  • Park, Mee-Sun;Park, Soon-Young;Kim, Sung-Jin;Min, Kyung-Hee
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.17 no.6
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    • pp.552-555
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    • 1989
  • A 150-fold purified preparation of NADPH-specific glutamate dehydrogenase of Corynebacterium glutamicum (1) was used for the determination of kinetic parameters of the substrates, NADPH, NH$_4$Cl, and $\alpha$-ketoglutarate in the direction of glutamate synthesis. The kinetic constants determined from this study suggest a biosynthetic role for the enzyme, Based on the analysis of the result derived from initial velocity, the reaction mechanism was postulated to be ordered addition with NADPH as a first substrate to bind in the forward direction. Of the several metabolites tested for a possible function in the regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase activity, only malate and citrate were appeared to have an appreciable influence on the enzyme, Potassium chloride showed to be the most effective for the enzyme activity.

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Biphasic Dynamic Kinetic Resolution of ρ,α-Dimethyl Benzyl Alcohol over Zeolite-Enzyme Catalysts (제올라이트-효소 촉매를 이용한 ρ,α-Dimethyl Benzyl Alcohol의 2상 동적 속도론적 광학분할)

  • Cha, Yeon-Ju;Ko, Moon-Kyu;Park, Yeung-Ho
    • Applied Chemistry for Engineering
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    • v.17 no.6
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    • pp.658-664
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    • 2006
  • $\rho$, $\alpha$-dimethyl benzyl alcohol was resolved by the biphasic dynamic kinetic resolution (DKR). Acidic zeolite was used as a racemization catalyst while immobilized enzyme was employed for kinetic resolution. The effects of the process variables including nature of acyl donor, reaction temperature, substrate concentration, ratio of the two catalysts and stirring rate on the conversion and enantiomeric purity of the product were investigated. In DKR of $\rho$, $\alpha$-dimethyl benzyl alcohol, the product of 99% ee was obtained with a maximum yield of 88%. The high performance of the catalyst system was maintained in the condition of higher TON and under repeated use.

Substrate Ground State Binding Energy Concentration Is Realized as Transition State Stabilization in Physiological Enzyme Catalysis

  • Britt, Billy Mark
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.37 no.5
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    • pp.533-537
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    • 2004
  • Previously published kinetic data on the interactions of seventeen different enzymes with their physiological substrates are re-examined in order to understand the connection between ground state binding energy and transition state stabilization of the enzyme-catalyzed reactions. When the substrate ground state binding energies are normalized by the substrate molar volumes, binding of the substrate to the enzyme active site may be thought of as an energy concentration interaction; that is, binding of the substrate ground state brings in a certain concentration of energy. When kinetic data of the enzyme/substrate interactions are analyzed from this point of view, the following relationships are discovered: 1) smaller substrates possess more binding energy concentrations than do larger substrates with the effect dropping off exponentially, 2) larger enzymes (relative to substrate size) bind both the ground and transition states more tightly than smaller enzymes, and 3) high substrate ground state binding energy concentration is associated with greater reaction transition state stabilization. It is proposed that these observations are inconsistent with the conventional (Haldane) view of enzyme catalysis and are better reconciled with the shifting specificity model for enzyme catalysis.

Non-Essential Activation of Co2+ and Zn2+ on Mushroom Tyrosinase: Kinetic and Structural Stability

  • Gheibi, N.;Saboury, A.A.;Sarreshtehdari, M.
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.32 no.5
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    • pp.1500-1506
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    • 2011
  • Tyrosinase is a widespread enzyme with great promising capabilities. The Lineweaver-Burk plots of the catecholase reactions showed that the kinetics of mushroom tyrosinase (MT), activated by $Co^{2+}$ and $Zn^{2+}$ at different pHs (6, 7, 8 and 9) obeyed the non-essential activation mode. The binding of metal ions to the enzyme increases the maximum velocity of the enzyme due to an increase in the enzyme catalytic constant ($k_{cat}$). From the kinetic analysis, dissociation constants of the activator from the enzyme-metal ion complex ($K_a$) were obtained as $5{\times}10^4M^{-1}$ and $8.33{\times}10^3M^{-1}$ for $Co^{2+}$ and $Zn^{2+}$ at pH 9 and 6 respectively. The structural analysis of MT through circular dichroism (CD) and intensive fluorescence spectra revealed that the conformational stability of the enzyme in these pHs reaches its maximum value in the presence of each of the two metal ions.