Equilibrium modeling of extractive enzymatic hydrolysis of penicillin G with concomitant 6-aminopenicillanic acid crystallization.

In the present downstream processing of penicillin G, penicillin G is extracted from the fermentation broth with an organic solvent and purified as a potassium salt via a number of back-extraction and crystallization steps. After purification, penicillin G is hydrolyzed to 6-aminopenicillanic acid, a precursor for many semisynthetic beta-lactam antibiotics. We are studying a reduction in the number of pH shifts involved and hence a large reduction in the waste salt production. To this end, the organic penicillin G extract is directly to be added to an aqueous immobilized enzyme suspension reactor and hydrolyzed by extractive catalysis. We found that this conversion can exceed 90% because crystallization of 6-aminopenicillanic acid shifts the equilibrium to the product side. A model was developed for predicting the equilibrium conversion in batch systems containing both a water and a butyl acetate phase, with either potassium or D-p-hydroxyphenylglycine methyl ester as counter-ion of penicillin G. The model incorporates the partitioning equilibrium of the reactants, the enzymatic reaction equilibrium, and the crystallization equilibrium of 6-aminopenicillanic acid. The model predicted the equilibrium conversion of Pen G quite reasonably for different values of pH, initial penicillin G concentration and phase volume ratio. The model can be used as a tool for optimizing the enzymatic hydrolysis.

[1]  K. Schügerl,et al.  Integrated membrane extraction, enzymic conversion and electrodialysis for the synthesis of ampicillin from penicillin G , 1997 .

[2]  A. Straathof,et al.  Predicting enzyme catalyzed reaction equilibria in cosolvent-water mixtures as a function of pH and solvent composition , 1998 .

[3]  T. Scheper,et al.  An integrated process for the production and biotransformation of penicillin. , 1992, Journal of biotechnology.

[4]  J. Prausnitz,et al.  Extractive catalysis: Solvent effects on equilibria of enzymatic reactions in two-phase systems , 1989 .

[5]  Heijnen,et al.  Course of pH during the formation of amoxicillin by a suspension-to-suspension reaction. , 2000, Enzyme and microbial technology.

[6]  John M. Woodley,et al.  Extractive biocatalysis: the use of two-liquid phase biocatalytic reactors to assist product recovery , 1990 .

[7]  R. Fernández-Lafuente,et al.  Use of aqueous two-phase systems for in situ extraction of water soluble antibiotics during their synthesis by enzymes immobilized on porous supports. , 1998, Biotechnology and bioengineering.

[8]  K. Schügerl,et al.  Reactive extraction of penicillin II: Distribution coefficients and degrees of extraction , 1984 .

[9]  R. Goldberg,et al.  Thermodynamics of the conversion of penicillin G to phenylacetic acid and 6-aminopenicillanic acid. , 1988, Biophysical chemistry.

[10]  K. Martínek,et al.  Enzymatic synthesis in biphasic aqueous-organic systems. II. Shift of ionic equilibria. , 1981, Biochimica et biophysica acta.

[11]  K. Martínek,et al.  Enzymatic synthesis in biphasic aqueous-organic systems. I. Chemical equilibrium shift. , 1981, Biochimica et biophysica acta.

[12]  K. Schügerl,et al.  Reactive extraction of penicillin I: Stability of penicillin G in the presence of carriers and relationships for distribution coefficients and degrees , 1984 .