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Dive into the research topics where Karel Hernández is active.

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Featured researches published by Karel Hernández.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2011

Control of protein immobilization: coupling immobilization and site-directed mutagenesis to improve biocatalyst or biosensor performance.

Karel Hernández; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

Mutagenesis and immobilization are usually considered to be unrelated techniques with potential applications to improve protein properties. However, there are several reports showing that the use of site-directed mutagenesis to improve enzyme properties directly, but also how enzymes are immobilized on a support, can be a powerful tool to improve the properties of immobilized biomolecules for use as biosensors or biocatalysts. Standard immobilizations are not fully random processes, but the protein orientation may be difficult to alter. Initially, most efforts using this idea were addressed towards controlling the orientation of the enzyme on the immobilization support, in many cases to facilitate electron transfer from the support to the enzyme in redox biosensors. Usually, Cys residues are used to directly immobilize the protein on a support that contains disulfide groups or that is made from gold. There are also some examples using His in the target areas of the protein and using supports modified with immobilized metal chelates and other tags (e.g., using immobilized antibodies). Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis to control immobilization is useful for improving the activity, the stability and even the selectivity of the immobilized protein, for example, via site-directed rigidification of selected areas of the protein. Initially, only Cys and disulfide supports were employed, but other supports with higher potential to give multipoint covalent attachment are being employed (e.g., glyoxyl or epoxy-disulfide supports). The advances in support design and the deeper knowledge of the mechanisms of enzyme-support interactions have permitted exploration of the possibilities of the coupled use of site-directed mutagenesis and immobilization in a new way. This paper intends to review some of the advances and possibilities that these coupled strategies permit.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2011

Simple and efficient immobilization of lipase B from Candida antarctica on porous styrene-divinylbenzene beads.

Karel Hernández; Cristina Garcia-Galan; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

Two commercial porous styrene-divinylbenzene beads (Diaion HP20LX and MCI GEL CHP20P) have been evaluated as supports to immobilize lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB). MCI GEL CHP20P rapidly immobilized the enzyme, permitting a very high loading capacity: around 110mgCALB/wetg of support compared to the 50mg obtained using decaoctyl Sepabeads. Although enzyme specificity of the enzyme immobilized on different supports was quite altered by the support used in the immobilization, specific activity of the enzyme immobilized on MCI GEL CHP20P was always higher than those found using decaoctyl Sepabeads for all assayed substrates. Thus, a CALB biocatalyst having 3-8 folds (depending on the substrate) higher activity/wet gram of support than the commercial Novozym 435 was obtained. Half-live of CAL-Diaion HP20LX at 60°C was 2-3 higher than the one of Novozym 435, it was 30-40 higher in the presence of 50% acetonitrile and it was around 100 folds greater in the presence of 10M hydrogen peroxide. Results indicate that styrene-divinylbenzene supports may be promising alternatives as supports to immobilize CALB.


Current Organic Chemistry | 2012

Hydrogen Peroxide in Biocatalysis. A Dangerous Liaison

Karel Hernández; Ángel Berenguer-Murcia; Rafael C. Rodrigues; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

This work has been supported by grant CTQ2009-07568 from Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion. A. Berenguer-Murcia thanks the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion for a Ramon y Cajal fellowship (RyC-2009-03813). Mr. Hernandez is a holder of a MAEC-AECID fellowship.


Molecules | 2014

Evaluation of Styrene-Divinylbenzene Beads as a Support to Immobilize Lipases

Cristina Garcia-Galan; Oveimar Barbosa; Karel Hernández; Jose C.S. dos Santos; Rafael C. Rodrigues; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

A commercial and very hydrophobic styrene-divinylbenzene matrix, MCI GEL® CHP20P, has been compared to octyl-Sepharose® beads as support to immobilize three different enzymes: lipases from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) and from Rhizomucor miehie (RML) and Lecitase® Ultra, a commercial artificial phospholipase. The immobilization mechanism on both supports was similar: interfacial activation of the enzymes versus the hydrophobic surface of the supports. Immobilization rate and loading capacity is much higher using MCI GEL® CHP20P compared to octyl-Sepharose® (87.2 mg protein/g of support using TLL, 310 mg/g using RML and 180 mg/g using Lecitase® Ultra). The thermal stability of all new preparations is much lower than that of the standard octyl-Sepharose® immobilized preparations, while the opposite occurs when the inactivations were performed in the presence of organic co-solvents. Regarding the hydrolytic activities, the results were strongly dependent on the substrate and pH of measurement. Octyl-Sepharose® immobilized enzymes were more active versus p-NPB than the enzymes immobilized on MCI GEL® CHP20P, while RML became 700-fold less active versus methyl phenylacetate. Thus, the immobilization of a lipase on this matrix needs to be empirically evaluated, since it may present very positive effects in some cases while in other cases it may have very negative ones.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2011

Hydrolysis of triacetin catalyzed by immobilized lipases: Effect of the immobilization protocol and experimental conditions on diacetin yield ☆

Karel Hernández; Eduardo García-Verdugo; Raúl Porcar; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

The effect of the immobilization protocol and some experimental conditions (pH value and presence of acetonitrile) on the regioselective hydrolysis of triacetin to diacetin catalyzed by lipases has been studied. Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CALB) and lipase from Rhizomucor miehei (RML) were immobilized on Sepabeads (commercial available macroporous acrylic supports) activated with glutaraldehyde (covalent immobilization) or octadecyl groups (adsorption via interfacial activation). All the biocatalysts accumulated diacetin. Covalently immobilized RML was more active towards rac-methyl mandelate than the adsorbed RML. However, this covalent RML preparation presented the lowest activity towards triacetin. For this reason, this preparation was discarded as biocatalyst for this reaction. At pH 7, acyl migration occurred giving a mixture of 1,2 and 1,3 diacetin, but at pH 5.5, only 1,2 diacetin was produced. Yields were improved at acidic pH values and in the presence of 20% acetonitrile (to over 95%). RML immobilized on octadecyl Sepabeads was proposed as optimal preparation, mainly due to its higher specific activity. Each enzyme preparation presented very different properties. Moreover, changes in the reaction conditions affected the various immobilized enzymes in a different way.


Current Organic Chemistry | 2015

Immobilization of Proteins in Poly-Styrene-Divinylbenzene Matrices: Functional Properties and Applications

Rafael C. Rodrigues; Karel Hernández; Oveimar Barbosa; Nazzoly Rueda; Cristina Garcia-Galan; Jose C.S. dos Santos; Ángel Berenguer-Murcia; Roberto Fernández Lafuente

We gratefully recognize the support from the Spanish Government, CTQ2013-41507-R and CNPq (Brazil). The predoctoral fellowships for Ms. Garcia-Galan (Spanish Government), Mr K. Hernandez (I3P-CSIC) and Mr dos Santos (CNPq, Brazil) are also recognized. ). A. Berenguer-Murcia thanks the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion for a Ramon y Cajal fellowship (RyC-2009-03813).


ChemBioChem | 2018

Nucleophile Promiscuity of Natural and Engineered Aldolases

Karel Hernández; Anna Szekrenyi; Pere Clapés

The asymmetric aldol addition reaction mediated by aldolases is recognized as a green and sustainable method for carbon–carbon bond formation. Research in this area has unveiled their unprecedented synthetic potential toward diverse, new chemical structures; novel product families; and even as a technology for industrial manufacturing processes. Despite these advances, aldolases have long been regarded as strictly selective catalysts, particularly for nucleophilic substrates, which limits their broad applicability. In recent years, advances in screening technologies and metagenomics have uncovered novel C−C biocatalysts from superfamilies of widely known lyases. Moreover, protein engineering has revealed the extraordinary malleability of different carboligases to offer a toolbox of biocatalysts active towards a large structural diversity of nucleophile substrates. Herein, the nucleophile ambiguity of native and engineered aldolases is discussed with recent examples to prove this novel concept.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Nucleophile Promiscuity of Engineered Class II Pyruvate Aldolase YfaU from E. Coli

Karel Hernández; Jesús Joglar; Jordi Bujons; Teodor Parella; Pere Clapés

Pyruvate-dependent aldolases exhibit a stringent selectivity for pyruvate, limiting application of their synthetic potential, which is a drawback shared with other existing aldolases. Structure-guided rational protein engineering rendered a 2-keto-3-deoxy-l-rhamnonate aldolase variant, fused with a maltose-binding protein (MBP-YfaU W23V/L216A), capable of efficiently converting larger pyruvate analogues, for example, those with linear and branched aliphatic chains, in aldol addition reactions. Combination of these nucleophiles with N-Cbz-alaninal (Cbz=benzyloxycarbonyl) and N-Cbz-prolinal electrophiles gave access to chiral building blocks, for example, derivatives of (2S,3S,4R)-4-amino-3-hydroxy-2-methylpentanoic acid (68 %, d.r. 90:10) and the enantiomer of dolaproine (33 %, d.r. 94:6) as well as a collection of unprecedented α-amino acid derivatives of the proline and pyrrolizidine type. Conversions varied between 6-93 % and diastereomeric ratios from 50:50 to 95:5 depending on the nucleophilic and electrophilic components.


ACS Catalysis | 2018

Biocatalytic Aldol Addition of Simple Aliphatic Nucleophiles to Hydroxyaldehydes

Raquel Roldán; Karel Hernández; Jesús Joglar; Jordi Bujons; Teodor Parella; Israel Sánchez-Moreno; Virgil Hélaine; Marielle Lemaire; Christine Guérard-Hélaine; Wolf-Dieter Fessner; Pere Clapés

Asymmetric aldol addition of simple aldehydes and ketones to electrophiles is a cornerstone reaction for the synthesis of unusual sugars and chiral building blocks. We investigated d-fructose-6-phosphate aldolase from E. coli (FSA) D6X variants as catalysts for the aldol additions of ethanal and nonfunctionalized linear and cyclic aliphatic ketones as nucleophiles to nonphosphorylated hydroxyaldehydes. Thus, addition of propanone, cyclobutanone, cyclopentanone, or ethanal to 3-hydroxypropanal or (S)- or (R)-3-hydroxybutanal catalyzed by FSA D6H and D6Q variants furnished rare deoxysugars in 8–77% isolated yields with high stereoselectivity (97:3 dr and >95% ee).


Process Biochemistry | 2011

Lipase B from Candida antarctica immobilized on octadecyl Sepabeads: A very stable biocatalyst in the presence of hydrogen peroxide

Karel Hernández; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

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Pere Clapés

Spanish National Research Council

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Jesús Joglar

Spanish National Research Council

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Jordi Bujons

Spanish National Research Council

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Teodor Parella

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Giovanna Petrillo

Spanish National Research Council

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Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente

Spanish National Research Council

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Igor Zelen

Spanish National Research Council

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Isabel Usón

University of Göttingen

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Cristina Garcia-Galan

Spanish National Research Council

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