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Remaining acetamide in acetonitrile degradation using nitrile hydratase- and amidase-producing microorganisms.

Authors :
Kohyama E
Dohi M
Yoshimura A
Yoshida T
Nagasawa T
Source :
Applied microbiology and biotechnology [Appl Microbiol Biotechnol] 2007 Mar; Vol. 74 (4), pp. 829-35. Date of Electronic Publication: 2006 Nov 29.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The tandem conversion process involving nitrile hydratase- and amidase-producing microorganisms has potential for use in the treatment of acetonitrile-containing wastes. In that process, the acetamide hydrolysis step catalyzed by amidase is very slow compared with the acetonitrile hydration step catalyzed by nitrile hydratase, and a small amount of acetamide remains in the resulting solution. This study aimed to improve the efficiency of the acetamide hydrolysis step. An amidase-producing microorganism, Rhodococcus sp. S13-4, was newly obtained, whose use enabled rapid acetamide degradation. Though residual acetamide was still detected, it was successfully reduced by the addition of cation/anion mixed ion exchange resin or calcium hydroxide after the acetamide hydrolysis reaction using Rhodococcus sp. S13-4 cells. This result implies that acetamide hydrolysis and acetamide formation are in equilibrium. The incubation of Rhodococcus sp. S13-4 cells with high concentrations of ammonium acetate produced acetamide. The purified amidase from Rhodococcus sp. S13-4 revealed the acetamide formation activity (specific activity of 30.6 U/mg protein). This suggests that the amidase-catalyzed amide formation may cause the remaining of acetamide in the acetonitrile conversion process.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0175-7598
Volume :
74
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Applied microbiology and biotechnology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17136368
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00253-006-0738-2