Publications by authors named "E Cernia"

Nanostructured polystyrene (PS) and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) were used as carriers for the preparation of bioconjugates with lipolytic enzymes, such as Candida rugosa lipase (CRL) and Pseudomonas cepacia lipase (PCL). Simple addition of the lipase solution to the polymeric nanoparticles under protein-friendly conditions (pH 7.6) led to the formation of polymer-enzyme bioconjugates.

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Candida rugosa lipase crude preparations (CRL) catalyse the regioselective acylation of methyl 6-O-trytil beta-d-glucopyranoside in organic solvents, using vinyl acetate as acyl donor. The ratio of the two products formed, namely methyl 2-O acetyl 6-O-trytil beta-d-glucopyranoside and methyl 3-O acetyl 6-O-trytil beta-d-glucopyranoside was found to be markedly affected by the nature of the reaction medium. In hydrophobic solvents values up to 80% of the monoacetylated product in position C-3 were obtained compared to less than 30% in solvents with low hydrophobicity.

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(+/-)-2-(6-Methoxy-2-naphthyl)propionic acid methyl ester (methyl ester of Naproxen), the precursor of therapeutically important nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) was enantioselectively hydrolysed using as biocatalyst Candida rugosa lipase. In research aimed at studying the structure-activity relationship (SAR), NMR spectroscopy methods were employed to identify which Naproxen molecular moiety was essential to the substrate-enzyme interaction. The experimental results, in agreement with previous computer modelling studies and reported kinetic data, gave new information on the enzyme-substrate complex formation in solution.

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Within a research project aimed at probing the substrate specificity and the enantioselectivity of Candida rugosa lipase (CRL), computer modeling studies of the interactions between CRL and methyl (+/-)-2-(3-benzoylphenyl)propionate (Ketoprofen methyl ester) have been carried out in order to identify which amino acids are essential to the enzyme/substrate interaction. Different binding models of the substrate enantiomers to the active site of CRL were investigated by applying a computational protocol based on molecular docking, conformational analysis, and energy minimization procedures. The structural models of the computer generated complexes between CRL and the substrates enabled us to propose that Phe344 and Phe345, in addition to the residues constituting the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole, are the amino acids mainly involved in the enzyme-ligand interactions.

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Racemic arylpropionic esters 1-3, precursors of therapeutically important non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, were subjected to hydrolyses in the presence of either Candida rugosa or Rhizomucor miehei crude lipases. The hydrolyses of 1 and 2 proved to be highly enantioselective, whereas 3 was not transformed at all. Both the substrate specificity and the enantioselectivity of these lipases were explained through a molecular modeling study involving docking experiments between 1-3 and the amino acids forming the enzymes active-sites, whose three dimensional structures were obtained from X-ray crystallographic data, followed by extensive conformational analysis on their computer-generated complexes.

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