Effects of porous polystyrene resin parameters on Candida antarctica lipase B adsorption, distribution, and polyester synthesis activity

Langmuir. 2007 May 22;23(11):6467-74. doi: 10.1021/la063515y. Epub 2007 Apr 24.

Abstract

Polystyrene resins with varied particle sizes (35 to 350-600 microm) and pore diameters (300-1000 A) were employed to study the effects of immobilization resin particle size and pore diameter on Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB) loading, distribution within resins, fraction of active sites, and catalytic properties for polyester synthesis. CALB adsorbed rapidly (saturation time </= 4 min) for particle sizes </= 120 microm (pore size = 300 A). Infrared microspectroscopy showed that CALB forms protein loading fronts regardless of resin particle size at similar enzyme loadings ( approximately 8%). From the IR images, the fractions of total surface area available to the enzyme are 21, 33, 35, 37, and 88% for particle sizes 350-600, 120, 75, 35 microm (pore size 300 A), and 35 microm (pore size 1000 A), respectively. Titration with methyl p-nitrophenyl n-hexylphosphate (MNPHP) showed that the fraction of active CALB molecules adsorbed onto resins was approximately 60%. The fraction of active CALB molecules was invariable as a function of resin particle and pore size. At approximately 8% (w/w) CALB loading, by increasing the immobilization support pore diameter from 300 to 1000 A, the turnover frequency (TOF) of epsilon-caprolactone (epsilon-CL) to polyester increased from 12.4 to 28.2 s-1. However, the epsilon-CL conversion rate was not influenced by changes in resin particle size. Similar trends were observed for condensation polymerizations between 1,8-octanediol and adipic acid. The results herein are compared to those obtained with a similar series of methyl methacrylate resins, where variations in particle size largely affected CALB distribution within resins and catalyst activity for polyester synthesis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Candida / enzymology*
  • Catalytic Domain
  • Enzymes, Immobilized / chemistry
  • Enzymes, Immobilized / metabolism
  • Fungal Proteins
  • Lipase / chemistry
  • Lipase / metabolism*
  • Particle Size
  • Polyesters / metabolism*
  • Polystyrenes
  • Resins, Synthetic
  • Spectrophotometry, Infrared

Substances

  • Enzymes, Immobilized
  • Fungal Proteins
  • Polyesters
  • Polystyrenes
  • Resins, Synthetic
  • Lipase
  • lipase B, Candida antarctica