AI Article Synopsis

  • Viable microbial cells serve as effective biocatalysts for producing fine chemicals, biofuels, and in fields like biosensors and medicine.
  • Their importance is rising due to the development of advanced recombinant strains and improved methods for preserving the stability of these cells.
  • The review covers recent advancements in the immobilization of whole-cell biocatalysts, including various techniques and considerations related to bioreaction engineering and economic implications.

Article Abstract

Viable microbial cells are important biocatalysts in the production of fine chemicals and biofuels, in environmental applications and also in emerging applications such as biosensors or medicine. Their increasing significance is driven mainly by the intensive development of high performance recombinant strains supplying multienzyme cascade reaction pathways, and by advances in preservation of the native state and stability of whole-cell biocatalysts throughout their application. In many cases, the stability and performance of whole-cell biocatalysts can be highly improved by controlled immobilization techniques. This review summarizes the current progress in the development of immobilized whole-cell biocatalysts, the immobilization methods as well as in the bioreaction engineering aspects and economical aspects of their biocatalytic applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10529-017-2300-yDOI Listing

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