Perilous and polluting industrial processes can be made safer with enzymes.
But only a short range of enzymes have been available for the chemical industry.
Recently a group of researchers at The Department of Chemistry at University
of Copenhagen succeeded in producing an artificial enzyme that points the
way to enzymes tailor-made for any application.
With their group leader, Professor Mikael Bols, Ph.d. students Jeanette Bjerre
and Thomas Hauch Fenger are publishing details of their breakthrough in recognized
international ChemBioChem (15/2009) under the title "Cyclodextrin Aldehydes
are Oxidase Mimics"
Artificial enzymes for unnatural tasks
An enzyme unlike any seen in nature, this new one distinguishes itself in three
ways. Its effect is powerful. It's easy to produce. And the researchers from
the Copenhagen labs are the first to fashion an enzyme that is capable of speeding
up oxidizing processes. With the simple and cheap compound Hydrogen Peroxide
no less.
Oxidizing processes are considered one of the cornerstones of all chemical
production. From paint to pharmaceuticals. But traditional oxidizers have a
reputation for being dangerously unrefined. That's why enzymes are desirable
and tailor made ones doubly so. For one thing they can be designed to be unbelievably
specific. But even more important is their ability to operate under humane conditions,
unlike their traditional chemical counterparts, which often need high temperatures,
extreme pressure and corrosive surroundings.
New tool in the box
Until recently enzymes were exclusively found in micro organisms in the wild.
But the challenges faced by microbes and chemical corporations are hardly comparable.
So industries have been short on eco friendly alternatives to chemicals. The
new artificial enzyme from Copenhagen adds a whole new class of tools to the
toolbox of the chemists. And it's fast. Though not yet fast enough.
Natural enzymes typically speed up reactions by as much as 1 million times.
The new enzyme from the Bols-group will speed up reactions by no more than 10.000
times. But that's not to be sneezed at says professor Mikael Bols.
"We have been developing these substances since year 2000. When we succeeded
with the first enzyme, it's reaction speed was only multiplied by 25, so I think
it's fair to speak of a breakthrough here", says the professor.
As the new enzymes inch closer to the natural reaction-times, they they are
bound to become increasingly important for sensitive processes like those of
the pharmaceutical industry.
Posted October 22nd, 2009