ABSTRACT
In this study, trypsin (Enzyme Comission 3.4.21.4) was immobilized in a low cost, lignocellulosic support (corn cob powder-CCP) with the goal of obtaining peptides with bioactive potential from cheese whey. The pretreated support was activated with glyoxyl groups, glutaraldehyde and IDA-glyoxyl. The immobilization yields of the derivatives were higher than 83%, and the retention of catalytic activity was higher than 74%. The trypsin-glyoxyl-CCP derivative was thermally stable at 65 °C, a value that was 1090-fold higher than that obtained with the free enzyme. The trypsin-IDA-glyoxyl-CCP and trypsin-glutaraldehyde-CCP derivatives had thermal stabilities that were 883- and five-fold higher, respectively, then those obtained with the free enzyme. In the batch experiments, trypsin-IDA-glyoxyl-CCP retained 91% of its activity and had a degree of hydrolysis of 12.49%, while the values for trypsin-glyoxyl-CCP were 87% and 15.46%, respectively. The stabilized derivative trypsin-glyoxyl-CCP was also tested in an upflow packed-bed reactor. The hydrodynamic characterization of this reactor was a plug flow pattern, and the kinetics of this system provided a relative activity of 3.04 ± 0.01 U·g-1 and an average degree of hydrolysis of 23%, which were suitable for the production of potentially bioactive peptides.
ABSTRACT
We investigated modulation by ATP, Mg²âº, Naâº, K⺠and NH4⺠and inhibition by ouabain of (Naâº,Kâº)-ATPase activity in microsomal homogenates of whole zoeae I and decapodid III (formerly zoea IX) and whole-body and gill homogenates of juvenile and adult Amazon River shrimps, Macrobrachium amazonicum. (Naâº,Kâº)-ATPase-specific activity was increased twofold in decapodid III compared to zoea I, juveniles and adults, suggesting an important role in this ontogenetic stage. The apparent affinity for ATP (K(M) = 0.09 ± 0.01 mmol L⻹) of the decapodid III (Naâº,Kâº)-ATPase, about twofold greater than the other stages, further highlights this relevance. Modulation of (Naâº,Kâº-ATPase activity by K⺠also revealed a threefold greater affinity for K⺠(K0.5 = 0.91 ± 0.04 mmol L⻹) in decapodid III than in other stages; NH4⺠had no modulatory effect. The affinity for Na⺠(K0.5 = 13.2 ± 0.6 mmol L⻹) of zoea I (Naâº,Kâº)-ATPase was fourfold less than other stages. Modulation by Naâº, Mg²âº and NH4⺠obeyed cooperative kinetics, while K⺠modulation exhibited Michaelis-Menten behavior. Rates of maximal Mg²âº stimulation of ouabain-insensitive ATPase activity differed in each ontogenetic stage, suggesting that Mg²âº-stimulated ATPases other than (Naâº,Kâº)-ATPase are present. Ouabain inhibition suggests that, among the various ATPase activities present in the different stages, Naâº-ATPase may be involved in the ontogeny of osmoregulation in larval M. amazonicum. The NH4âº-stimulated, ouabain-insensitive ATPase activity seen in zoea I and decapodid III may reflect a stage-specific means of ammonia excretion since functional gills are absent in the early larval stages.