43 research outputs found

    In vitro phosphorylation as tool for modification of silk and keratin fibrous materials

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    An overview is given of the recent work on in vitro enzymatic phosphorylation of silk fibroin and human hair keratin. Opposing to many chemical "conventional" approaches, enzymatic phosphorylation is in fact a mild reaction and the treatment falls within "green chemistry" approach. Silk and keratin are not phosphorylated in vivo, but in vitro. This enzyme-driven modification is a major technological breakthrough. Harsh chemical chemicals are avoided, and mild conditions make enzymatic phosphorylation a real "green chemistry" approach. The current communication presents a novel approach stating that enzyme phosphorylation may be used as a tool to modify the surface charge of biocompatible materials such as keratin and silk

    Characterization of an extracellular lipase and its chaperone from Ralstonia eutropha H16

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    Lipase enzymes catalyze the reversible hydrolysis of triacylglycerol to fatty acids and glycerol at the lipid–water interface. The metabolically versatile Ralstonia eutropha strain H16 is capable of utilizing various molecules containing long carbon chains such as plant oil, organic acids, or Tween as its sole carbon source for growth. Global gene expression analysis revealed an upregulation of two putative lipase genes during growth on trioleate. Through analysis of growth and activity using strains with gene deletions and complementations, the extracellular lipase (encoded by the lipA gene, locus tag H16_A1322) and lipase-specific chaperone (encoded by the lipB gene, locus tag H16_A1323) produced by R. eutropha H16 was identified. Increase in gene dosage of lipA not only resulted in an increase of the extracellular lipase activity, but also reduced the lag phase during growth on palm oil. LipA is a non-specific lipase that can completely hydrolyze triacylglycerol into its corresponding free fatty acids and glycerol. Although LipA is active over a temperature range from 10 °C to 70 °C, it exhibited optimal activity at 50 °C. While R. eutropha H16 prefers a growth pH of 6.8, its extracellular lipase LipA is most active between pH 7 and 8. Cofactors are not required for lipase activity; however, EDTA and EGTA inhibited LipA activity by 83 %. Metal ions Mg[superscript 2+], Ca[superscript 2+], and Mn[superscript 2+] were found to stimulate LipA activity and relieve chelator inhibition. Certain detergents are found to improve solubility of the lipid substrate or increase lipase-lipid aggregation, as a result SDS and Triton X-100 were able to increase lipase activity by 20 % to 500 %. R. eutropha extracellular LipA activity can be hyper-increased, making the overexpression strain a potential candidate for commercial lipase production or in fermentations using plant oils as the sole carbon source.Malaysia-MIT Biotechnology Partnership Programm

    Enzymic conversion of 3-hydroxanthranilic acid into cinnabarinic acid by the nuclear fraction of rat liver

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    1. An enzyme solely localized in the nuclear fraction of rat liver was found to convert 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid into a red product that was isolated and crystallized from the reaction mixture. The product was identified as cinnabarinic acid (2-amino-3-oxo-3H-phenoxazine-1,9-dicarboxylic acid) by comparing its properties with synthetic cinnabarinic acid. 2. The enzyme had optimum pH at 7·2. Heavy-metal ions like Ag(+), Hg(2+), MoO(4)(2−), Fe(2+) and Cu(2+) were inhibitory; Mn(2+) activated the reaction to a considerable extent. 3. The reaction was inhibited by mercaptoethanol, GSH and cysteine, and activated by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and sodium arsenite, which may suggest the involvement of disulphide groups in the reaction

    6V, 60Ah nickel-iron battery

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    High reversibility of the charge discharge reaction leads to the longest service life. The iron electrode has low hydrogen overvoltage. Its ionization potential and hydrogen evolution potential are very close in alkaline medium. As a result, the self discharge of this system is 1-2% of the nominal capacity at 300K [1]. The advanced Ni/Fe batteries with an energy density of 55-82 Wh/Kg [2,3] serve as power sources for electric vehicles. The electrode fabrication techniques and the performance characteristics of the 6V, 60Ah Ni/Fe battery are presented in this pape
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