INVESTIGADORES
BUCALA Veronica
artículos
Título:
Multiple Effects of Water Content on Solvent-free Enzymatic Esterifications
Autor/es:
FORESTI, MARÍA LAURA; PEDERNERA, MARISA; BUCALÁ, VERÓNICA; FERREIRA, MARÍA LUJÁN
Revista:
ENZYME AND MICROBIAL TECHNOLOGY
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Lugar: The Netherlands; Año: 2007 vol. 41 p. 62 - 70
ISSN:
0141-0229
Resumen:
  Enhancement of the catalytic activity of lipases has commonly been performed by biocatalyst modification (immobilization on hydrophobic supports, activation with interfaces, pretreatment with amphiphiles, etc.). In this work, the enhancement of the reaction rates obtained in lipase-catalyzed esterifications is achieved through modification of the number of liquid phases present in the medium in which the reaction takes place. The medium may by constituted by either just one liquid phase or two liquid phases, the split of the liquid phase can be controlled by manipulation of the water initially added to the system. As a result of the study of the role of water on the solvent-free enzymatic esterification of oleic acid with ethanol, the addition of relatively high amounts of water showed an unexpected beneficial effect: the ester yields increase in systems with high amounts of water added. The addition of high amounts of water to the mixture of substrates led to the generation of two-liquid phases systems, in which the fatty acid and the produced ester remained in the organic phase, the added and reaction-generated water migrated to the aqueous phase, and the ethanol partitioned between both phases. The existence of a second aqueous phase from the beginning of the reaction favored the extraction of water generated in the reaction, with an important reduction of the water content in the organic reactive phase. As a consequence, the increase in the global water content of reaction medium not only did not favor hydrolysis, but also increased fatty acid conversion in the first hours of reaction. Together with lipase hydration and equilibrium shift, effects commonly considered in the literature of lipase-catalyzed esterifications, this manuscript emphasizes another effect of water related to the formation of a two-liquid phases system. Experimental and modeling data from reactions catalyzed with up to 15 biocatalysts (native and immobilized lipases) are presented to analyze the role of water on the rate of solvent-free enzymatic esterifications. Keywords: solvent-free esterification, lipase, water effects, hydration, equilibrium shift, two-liquid phases system