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Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Polymers and nitrile hydratase activity

There have been a few papers over the years looking at the possibility that nitrile-active enzymes might be able to attack nitrile groups on the surface of nitrile-containing polymers such as polyacrylonitrile.  An early example of this is the paper by Gübitz and co-workers [Nitrile Hydratase and Amidase from Rhodococcus rhodochrous Hydrolyze Acrylic Fibers and Granular Polyacrylonitriles, from Appl Environ Microbiol (2000)] which uses a cell free extract from Rhodococcus rhodochrous NCIMB 11216 to create pendant carboxylate groups on the fibres.

More recently there has been another paper looking at this topic using a different cell-free extract
This uses an extract from Amycolatopsis, and they do show conversion of the surface to carboxylate, by functionally tracking a NHase activity and an amidase activity. I am not sure how they know there isnt a nitrilase in there helping along too (NCBI records currently an Amycolatopsis species nitrilase).

In the light of the congested active site entrance which is generally found with NHase, it is quite interesting this works.

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