The peak at 1,691 cm-1 corresponds to Amide I, the most intense absorption band
in proteins. It is primarily governed by the stretching vibrations of the C = O (70 to 85%) and C-N groups (10 to 20%) [36]. The setup of spectroscopic analysis presented above confirms the effective immobilization of a biocatalyst onto the Elafibranor molecular weight surface of PS support. Figure 4 Attenuated total reflectance (ATR) spectrum of PS structure with immobilized peroxidase taken after all the functionalization steps. FTIR analysis reveals some characteristic peaks of different functional group and peroxidase that has been infiltrated into the porous support. Specific and non-specific immobilization Table 1 shows the PF-04929113 enzyme activity and protein load of three different microreactors. The microreactor in which enzyme was loaded after glutaraldehyde shows maximum activity in comparison to the other two microreactors. Type of activation, its presence, distribution, and density of functional groups determines the activity yields of an immobilization reaction and operational stability of the carrier-fixed enzyme. Compared to non-specific adsorption, specific adsorption often
orients the enzyme molecule in a direction allowed by the nature of binding and the spatial complementary effect which may contribute for the higher activity in glutaraldehyde-activated microreactors. Table 1 Effect of immobilization chemistry on the enzyme loading onto PS support Microreactors Enzyme activity (U) Protein (mg) Oxidized + enzyme 0.193/50 ml 1.8/50 ml Oxidized + ADPES + enzyme MK-4827 in vivo 0.276/100 ml 2.4/100 ml Oxidized + ADPES + GTA + enzyme 0.712/100 ml 3.9/100 ml Effect of PS layer thickness on the enzymatic activity Peroxidase immobilization onto the microreactor with different thickness of the layer indicates that large amount of enzyme has been immobilized onto the thicker layer but are not available for the substrate conversion (data shown ever in Table 2). In most cases, a
large surface area and high porosity are desirable, so that enzyme and substrate (guaiacol) can easily penetrate. A pore size of >30 nm seems to make the internal surface accessible for immobilization of most enzymes. All reactions of immobilized enzymes must obey the physicochemical laws of mass transfer and their interplay with enzyme catalysis [37]. Table 2 Effect of PS layer thickness (Si wafer) on the enzymatic activity Thickness of the porous layer Enzyme activity Protein (U cm -2) (mg cm -2) Crystalline silicon No detectable activity 0.32 500 nm 0.576 2.15 4,000 nm 0.456 3.52 Thermal stability of immobilized peroxidase enzyme Thermo-stability is the ability of an enzyme to resist against thermal unfolding in the absence of substrates. The relative thermal stability of the free versus immobilized enzymes was compared at 50°C (Figure 5).