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CO2-responsive Pickering emulsions stabilized by soft protein particles for interfacial biocatalysis
Authors:Yongkang Xi  Bo Liu  Shuxin Wang  Shuheng Wei  Shouwei Yin  To Ngai  Xiaoquan Yang
Institution:Research and Development Centre of Food Proteins, School of Food Science and Engineering, Guangdong Province Key Laboratory for Green Processing of Natural Products Safety, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510640 P. R. China.; Department of Chemistry, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin N. T. Hong Kong.; Sino-Singapore International Joint Research Institute, Guangzhou 510640 P. R. China ; Research Institute for Food Nutrition and Human Health, Guangzhou P. R. China
Abstract:Pickering emulsions are emulsions stabilized by colloidal particles and serve as an excellent platform for biphasic enzymatic catalysis. However, developing simple and green strategies to avoid enzyme denaturation, facilitate product separation, and achieve the recovery of enzyme and colloidal particle stabilizers is still a challenge. This study aimed to report an efficient and sustainable biocatalysis system via a robust CO2/N2-responsive Pickering oil-in-water (o/w) emulsion stabilized solely by pure sodium caseinate (NaCas), which was made naturally in a scalable manner. The NaCas-stabilized emulsion displayed a much higher reaction efficiency compared with conventional CO2/N2-responsive Pickering emulsions stabilized by solid particles with functional groups from polymers or surfactants introduced to tailor responsiveness, reflected by the fact that most enzymes were transferred and enriched at the oil–water interface. More importantly, the demulsification, product separation, and recycling of the NaCas emulsifier as well as the enzyme could be facilely achieved by alternatively bubbling CO2/N2 more than 30 times. Moreover, the recycled enzyme still maintained its catalytic activity, with a conversion yield of more than 90% after each cycle, which was not found in any of the previously reported CO2-responsive systems. This responsive system worked well for many different types of oils and was the first to report on a protein-based CO2/N2-responsive emulsion, holding great promise for the development of more sustainable, green chemical conversion processes for the food, pharmaceutical, and biomedical industries.

An unprecedented strategy was proposed for recycled interfacial biocatalysis in a CO2-responsive emulsion stabilized by soft protein particles. The recycled enzyme maintained its catalytic activity, with a conversion yield over 90% after 30 cycles.
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