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Original Articles

Spouted Bed Drying as a Method for Enzyme Immobilization

, , , &
Pages 1756-1763 | Published online: 29 Oct 2013
 

Abstract

Usually immobilization is a requirement for the use of enzymes as an industrial biocatalyst. In this work, endophytic fungus Cercospora kikuchii lipase was immobilized by covalent binding on agricultural by-products and microcrystalline cellulose. The enzyme support system was submitted to spouted bed drying. Lipase immobilized on microcrystalline cellulose with 1.5% of glutaraldehyde showed the best results, presenting 179.1% of the original activity after drying, followed by rice husk (173.9%), corn stover (169.8%), sugarcane bagasse (157.3%), green coconut fiber (102.3%), and corncob (99.8%). The immobilized derivatives obtained showed a decreased enzyme activity with an average of only 17.31%, whereas the enzyme in its free form lost 85.8% of its initial activity after storage for 6 months. The operational stability showed that the biocatalysts prepared retained an average of 67.2% of the initial activity after five reuse cycles. The results showed that the use of agricultural by-products as low-cost support material associated with the spouted bed drying is promising and can contribute to industrial application of biocatalysts.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was supported by the State of São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP). T.A. Costa-Silva received a fellowship from FAPESP (Grant # 2011/00743-8).

Notes

a The responses were calculated from triplicate runs.

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