New surfactants have been synthesized for potential use in reversed micellar protein extraction operations. Preferential solubility of the surfactant in an aliphatic solvent such as hexane, heptane, or isooctane and the formation of reversed micelles accompanied with solubilization of significant qu
Mass transfer rate of protein extraction with reversed micelles
โ Scribed by Matthijs Dekker; Klaas Van't Riet; Bert H. Bijsterbosch; Peter Fijneman; Riet Hilhorst
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 961 KB
- Volume
- 45
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2509
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The rate of mass transfer in the liquid-liquid extraction of the enzyme Ix-amylase between an aqueous phase and a reversed micellar phase has been investigated.. Mass transfer rate coel%cients have been measured in a mixer/settler and in a stirred cell. The pH of the aqueous phase determines the distribution coefficient of the enzyme and thus the direction of transfer. Forward transfer of the enzyme from the aqueous to the reversed micellar phase (cationic surfactant) occurs at pH 10.0. The mass transfer rate of this process was found to be controlled by the diffusion of the enzyme in the aqueous phase boundary layer. Back transfer from the reversed micellar phase to the aqueous phase occurs in the PI-I range 4-6. In contrast to the forward transfer, this process was found to be controlled by the interfacial process of enzyme release from the reversed micelles instead of the boundary layer diffusion. The same effects have been observed for the transfer of the enzyme ribonuclease A to and from a reversed micellar phase with an anionic surfactant. A mechanism to explain the different mass transfer behaviour in forward and back transfer is suggested.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
A novel process has been developed to improve the refolding yield of denatured proteins. It uses reversed micelles to isolate denatured protein molecules from each other and thus, upon refolding, reduces the intermolecular interactions which lead to aggregation. The feasibility of this process was f
The gentle mixing characteristics of a Graesser contactor can help to avoid the formation of stable emulsions, which is one advantage of this type of contactor when used with reversed micellar extraction. In this study, the performance of the Graesser contactor in lysozyme extraction from hen egg wh