Application of a
biocatalyst at an industrial scale primarily depends
on its intrinsic properties, the nature of the support materials,
and the scalability of the catalyst. Support materials play an important
role in the biocatalytic performance with their mechanical and thermal
properties, accessibility, nontoxicity, and ease of derivatization
for immobilizion of enzyme. Chicken feather, a readily available poultry
waste material, was processed and modified for enzyme immobilization.
Free Trametes maxima laccase (TML)
was immobilized on the amino-functionalized chicken feather particles
(TML@ACFP), and an immobilization yield of 74.24% was achieved. Immobilization
improved the pH optimum from 3.0 (TML) to 4.1 (TML@ACFP) and temperature
optimum by 5 °C. The kinetics and thermodynamics of thermal inactivation
of free TML and immobilized TML@ACFP were studied over the temperature
range from 55 to 65 °C. The apparent half-life (t
1/2) and decimal reduction time (D-value)
for TML was found to be 154.9 and 514.8 min and 256.8 and 853.3 min
for TML@ACFP, respectively, at 55 °C. The activation energy for
deactivation (E
d) was found to be 117.48
and 137.85 kJ/mol for TML and TML@ACFP, respectively. Gibbs free energy
(ΔG) and change in enthalpy (ΔH) were increased from 106.58 and 114.75 kJ/mol for TML
to 107.96 and 135.12 kJ/mol for TML@ACFP, respectively, demonstrating
its higher stability. The biocatalytic transformation was performed
with TML@ACFP for the oxidation of lignin model compound veratryl
alcohol. So far, this is the first strategy that uses chicken feather
waste derived novel support material for immobilization of enzyme
and its application in the biotransformation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.