Model development for enzymatic reactive crystallization of β-lactam antibiotics: a reaction–diffusion-crystallization approach

Literature Information

Publication Date 2020-09-10
DOI 10.1039/D0RE00276C
Impact Factor 4.239
Authors

Hossein Salami, Colton E. Lagerman, Patrick R. Harris, Matthew A. McDonald, Andreas S. Bommarius, Ronald W. Rousseau, Martha A. Grover


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Abstract

Enzymatic reactive crystallization of β-lactam antibiotics provides a promising method for efficient and large-scale manufacturing. Since practical processes rely on immobilized enzyme for operation, a robust process model needs to take into account three phenomena of enzymatic reaction, species diffusion, and crystallization of the products. In this work a mathematical model and a numerical simulation procedure are developed for enzymatic reactive crystallization using penicillin G acylase immobilized on a porous carrier. Enzymatic reaction is described using previously established kinetic parameters for a commercial enzyme. An experimentally measured diffusivity is used to model the mass transport resistance, and a 1-D population balance model is used for crystallization of needle-like crystals from supersaturated species. The effect of five immobilization parameters, loading, carrier type and size, enzyme distribution, and carrier size distribution is systematically investigated using the developed model and their implications are discussed for synthesis of two β-lactam antibiotics, ampicillin and cephalexin, with different turnover rates. As expected, using carriers with larger radius, higher loading, and smaller diffusivity is shown to lead to significant mass transport resistance and deviation from free enzyme behavior. This effect is more drastic for the ampicillin system, which has faster dynamics due to lower affinity of enzyme for its nucleophile agent. Testing different enzyme distributions, it is shown that accumulation of enzyme at the outer regions of the carrier leads to an improved process and mitigation of mass transport resistance due to higher sensitivity of diffusion timescale to radius, compared to reaction timescale to enzyme concentration. Adding a crystallization module to the model allowed for dynamic modeling of processes with high substrate concentrations applicable to reactive crystallization. Effect of pH as a critical process parameter affecting both reaction and crystallization is discussed, as well as potential intra-carrier crystallization and consequent enzyme blockage.

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Source Journal

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering
CiteScore: 0
Self-citation Rate: 8.8%
Articles per Year: 284

Reaction Chemistry & Engineering is an interdisciplinary journal reporting cutting-edge research focused on enhancing the understanding and efficiency of reactions. Reaction engineering leverages the interface where fundamental molecular chemistry meets chemical engineering and technology. Challenges in chemistry can be overcome by the application of new technologies, while engineers may find improved solutions for process development from the latest developments in reaction chemistry. Reaction Chemistry & Engineering is a unique forum for researchers whose interests span the broad areas of chemical engineering and chemical sciences to come together in solving problems of importance to wider society. All papers should be written to be approachable by readers across the engineering and chemical sciences. Papers that consider multiple scales, from the laboratory up to and including plant scale, are particularly encouraged.

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