Enzyme Reactor Design Under Thermal Inactivation
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Reviews in Biotechnology
- Vol. 23 (1) , 61-93
- https://doi.org/10.1080/713609298
Abstract
Temperature is a very relevant variable for any bioprocess. Temperature optimization of bioreactor operation is a key aspect for process economics. This is especially true for enzyme-catalyzed processes, because enzymes are complex, unstable catalysts whose technological potential relies on their operational stability. Enzyme reactor design is presented with a special emphasis on the effect of thermal inactivation. Enzyme thermal inactivation is a very complex process from a mechanistic point of view. However, for the purpose of enzyme reactor design, it has been oversimplified frequently, considering one-stage first-order kinetics of inactivation and data gathered under nonreactive conditions that poorly represent the actual conditions within the reactor. More complex mechanisms are frequent, especially in the case of immobilized enzymes, and most important is the effect of catalytic modulators (substrates and products) on enzyme stability under operation conditions. This review focuses primarily on reactor design and operation under modulated thermal inactivation. It also presents a scheme for bioreactor temperature optimization, based on validated temperature-explicit functions for all the kinetic and inactivation parameters involved. More conventional enzyme reactor design is presented merely as a background for the purpose of highlighting the need for a deeper insight into enzyme inactivation for proper bioreactor design.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stability and stabilisation of penicillin acylaseJournal of Chemical Technology & Biotechnology, 1999
- Useful Methods in Enzymatic Synthesis of Peptides: A Comparative Study Focussing on Kinetically Controlled Synthesis of Ac-Phe-Ala-NH2Catalyzed by α-ChymotrypsinBiocatalysis and Biotransformation, 1999
- Three different coupled enzymatic systems for in situ regeneration of NADPHBiotechnology Techniques, 1999
- Finding and using hyperthermophilic enzymesTrends in Biotechnology, 1998
- Biocatalysts — the next generationTrends in Biotechnology, 1997
- Simulation of glucose isomerase reactor: optimum operating temperatureBioprocess and Biosystems Engineering, 1996
- Extremozymes: Expanding the Limits of BiocatalysisNature Biotechnology, 1995
- Waste treatment applications of enzymes: opportunities and obstaclesThe Chemical Engineering Journal, 1993
- Stabilizing effect of penicillin G sulfoxide, a competitive inhibitor of penicillin G acylase: Its practical applicationsEnzyme and Microbial Technology, 1991
- Increase in operational stability of immobilized glucose oxidase by the use of an artifical cosubstrateBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1985