100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Applied Biotechnology – Lecture Summary

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
21
Uploaded on
04-11-2025
Written in
2024/2025

This document bundle covers the complete course content for Applied Biotechnology, including detailed lecture summaries and practice questions with answers. Topics span from biocatalysis and enzyme engineering to green chemistry, drug discovery, bioprocess optimization, strain engineering, and autotrophic biotechnology. The materials explain theoretical principles, practical examples, and real-world applications, such as enzyme promiscuity, protein engineering (rational design vs. directed evolution), strain optimization, and gas fermentation processes. Ideal for students preparing for biotechnology exams or revising key concepts in industrial and applied biochemistry.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
November 4, 2025
Number of pages
21
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Lecture 1
Biocatalysis:
Biocatalysis is the chemical process through which enzymes or other biological catalysts
perform reactions between organic components. Biocatalysis has been used widely in the
pharmaceutical industry to make small molecule drugs. Otherwise could be decribed as a
catalyst from a biological origin.
Many different enzymes are used for countless different biological processes​
●​ Ribozymes (Catalytic RNA)
○​ Cleaving RNA
●​ Abzymes (Catalytic antibodies)
○​ Stabilizing a transition state
●​ Synzymes/Chemsymes (Artificial enzymes)
○​ Tailored molecules to catalyze certain reactions
●​ Designer enzymes
○​ Binds and stabilizes transition states

Glucose isomerase: Production of high fructose corn syrup
Niytile hydratase: production of acrylamide from acrylanitrile
Invertase: Hydrolyzing sucrose

Enzymes are sensitive?
Partly true; enzymes do not like high T, solvents, extreme pH
But this is certainly not always true/problematic
Enzymes are expensive?
Production is nowadays very efficient, but still depends on enzyme
Enzymes are very efficient: little needed
Enzymes are only active on their natural substrates?
In most cases not true, and engineering is possible
Enzymes only work in natural environment?
In many cases not true, and engineering is possible

Benefits of biocatalysis:
-​ Very efficient
-​ Long lifetime, low energy demand
-​ Environmentally friendly
-​ Only need mild condition
-​ Reduces waste
-​ Can be used in cascades
-​ Can often catalyze non natural reactions
-​ Can often perform under non natural conditions
-​ Non toxic, biocompatible, renewable
-​ Production of complex compounds
-​ Can be ‘engineerd’
-​ Many reaction types are feasible
-​ Chemoselective, Regioselective, Enantioselective

,Disadvantagers of biocatalysis:
-​ Only available in one enantioneric form (L-amino acids)
-​ Not always available
-​ Narrow operation parameters/condition (temp, salt, solvent)
-​ Highest activity in water/buffer
-​ Sometimes require cofactors
-​ Inhibition effects
-​ May cause allergies
-​ Often not considered/forgotten

Green chemistry
Reducing waste, material usage, hazards, risks, energy and costs. Doing chemistry the way
nature does chemistry.

-​ Prevent waste
-​ Atom economy
-​ Less hazardous synthesis
-​ Designing benign chemicals (Not for BC)
-​ Usage of benign solvents and auxiliaries
-​ Design for energy efficiency
-​ use of renewable feedstocks
-​ Reduce derivatives
-​ Catalysis
-​ Design for degradation (Not in BC)
-​ Real-time analysis for pollution prevention
-​ Inherently benign chemistry for accident prevention

Biocatalysis conforms with 10 out of the 12 green chemistry principles




Lecture 2
Chiral molecule: A molecule that lacks an internal plane of symmetry and thus has a
non-superimposable mirror image. A chiral molecule and its mirror image are called
enantiomers. The enantiomers diplay virtually the identical physical properties except for the
direction of rotation of polarized light. The can exhibit distinct behavior when subjected to a
chiral environment, meaning that enantiomers can have differing pharmaceutical functions.
Pharmaceuticas therefore need to be enantiopure. This can be achieved in different ways.

Resolution of racemates: a mixture of enantiomers is converted to an optically pure
product with a theoretical 50 − 100% yield. This can be done through direct crystallization,
crystallization of diastereomeric salts, or chromatography to separate the enantiomers.
Another way is through kinetic resolution, thus eating away one of the enantiomers.
Enzymes are found to be most versatile for kinetic resolution and many fine chemicals

, producers employ lipases, proteases, esterases, acylases and amidases. There are multiple
ways of doing kinetic resolution:
a. Kinetic resolution: addition of a catalyst that only converts one enantiomer into product.
This has a 50% theoretical yield.
b. Dynamic kinetic resolution: addition of a catalyst that only converts one enantiomer into
product with the addition of an enzyme that converts one enantiomer into the other. This has
100% theoretical yield.
c. Dynamic kinetic asymmetric transformation: the enantiomers are first desymmetrized
into a non-chiral molecule. A catalyst then converts the desymmetrized molecule into
product. This has a 100% theoretical yield.
d. Direct enantio-convergent transformation: addition of a catalyst that converts one
enantiomer in with retention of configuration, whereas the other enantiomer is converted with
an inverse of configuration into the desired product. This has a 100% theoretical yield.
-​ Asymmetric synthesis: a prostereogenic (no chiral center) substrate is converted to
an optically pure product with 100% theoretical yield.
-​ Exploitation of the chiral pool: making use of chiral compounds (building blocks)
isolated from natural sources.




Tools in a chemists chiral toolbox:
Enzymatic resolution (and enzyme immobilisation)
o development of new (dynamic) kinetic resolutions
o co-catalysts/tandem reactions
• Enzymatic asymmetric synthesis
o new enzymes are needed (C-N, C-C, C-O,….)
o focus on C-C bond formation
• Systems Biocatalysis
o development of new enzymatic cascade reactions
$6.57
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
wouterolderode

Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
wouterolderode Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
1 month
Number of followers
0
Documents
5
Last sold
1 month ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions