Olon and Biosphere have jointly announced they have developed a new production process through the engineering of the target enzyme, which has given extremely positive conversion results.
This comes one year after the launch of the International Network for Biocatalysis, an innovative scientific platform for the study and development of new industrial applications of biocatalysis.
The effectiveness of the enzyme in the conversion of keto acid to the corresponded unnatural amino acid useful as key starting material for the production of an Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient, was substantiated by the significant metrics measuring complete conversion; the supporting data are: target minimum enantiomeric purity required 99.7%, enantiomeric purity obtained > 99.9%.
The research project followed a virtuous model of collaboration between Olon Group, the HIMS-Biocat group led by Professor Francesco Mutti, who has pioneered ground-breaking research in enzyme engineering and the use of enzymes for performing novel, sustainable and “green” chemical reactions, and Biosphere, an Italian SME specialised in fermentation and industrial biotechnology.
The first phase of the research focused on the selection of the enzyme and its engineering to obtain the best yield and selectivity in the reductive amination reaction. Once the ad hoc optimised enzyme was obtained, the second phase took the form of developing the enzyme production process by fermentation.
Now, the project is in the final phase which foresees the completion of the production process on an industrial scale.
The partnership, which will be continued in the future with other research projects, brings together some of the most advanced expertise in the field of biocatalysis from both academic and industrial spheres, to implement large-scale biocatalysis as an industrial technology used within its production facilities in Italy and around the world.
Bioconversion is the transformation of a substrate, catalysed by an either free or immobilised enzyme, obtained from cellular cultures followed by different types of purification depending on the grade of enzyme needed for the specific process. New biocatalysts and biocatalytic systems can foster more sustainable and efficient synthesis of organic molecules that are relevant for the chemical industry, as well as to address fundamental questions of bioorganic chemistry and biochemistry.
The international network was created with the objective to launch large-scale biocatalysis as an industrial technology used within Olon production facilities in Italy and around the world. The partnership, bringing together some of the most advanced expertise in the field of biocatalysis from both academic and industrial spheres, unites the Olon Group, Biosphere — an Italian SME specialised in fermentation and industrial biotechnology — and the Biocatalysis Group of the Van't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS-Biocat) at the University of Amsterdam (UvA).
The HIMS-Biocat group, headed by Professor Francesco Mutti, has pioneered ground-breaking research in the area of enzyme engineering and the use of enzymes for performing novel, sustainable and “green” chemical reactions.