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Featured researches published by Kyoungseon Min.


Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering | 2014

Recent progress in nanobiocatalysis for enzyme immobilization and its application

Kyoungseon Min; Young Je Yoo

Recent advances in nanotechnology have provided various nanoscale materials that can be used as support for enzyme immobilization. Nanobiocatalysis integrating the biocatalyst and nanoscale materials is drawing great attention as innovative technology. Nanobiocatalysis could achieve not only a much higher enzyme loading capacity and a significantly enhanced mass transfer efficiency, but also unbelievable stabilization. In this review, we will present and discuss the recent progress in nanobiocatalysis and its applications in the fields of bioelectronics, bioconversion, and proteomics.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2011

A biosensor based on the self-entrapment of glucose oxidase within biomimetic silica nanoparticles induced by a fusion enzyme

Okkyoung Choi; Byung-Chun Kim; Ji Hye An; Kyoungseon Min; Yong Hwan Kim; Youngsoon Um; Min Kyu Oh; Byoung-In Sang

We constructed a fusion protein (GOx-R5) consisting of R5 (a polypeptide component of silaffin) and glucose oxidase (GOx) that was expressed in Pichia pastoris. Silaffin proteins are responsible for the formation of a silica-based cell matrix of diatoms, and synthetic variants of the R5 protein can perform silicification in vitro[1]. GOx secreted by P. pastoris was self-immobilized (biosilicification) in a pH 5 citric buffer using 0.1M tetramethoxysilane as a silica source. This self-entrapment property of GOx-R5 was used to immobilize GOx on a graphite rod electrode. An electric cell designed as a biosensor was prepared to monitor the glucose concentrations. The electric cell consisted of an Ag/AgCl reference electrode, a platinum counter electrode, and a working electrode modified with poly(neutral red) (PNR)/GOx/Nafion. Glucose oxidase was immobilized by fused protein on poly(neutral red) and covered by Nafion to protect diffusion to the solution. The morphology of the resulting composite PNR/GOx/Nafion material was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). This amperometric transducer was characterized electrochemically using cyclic voltammetry and amperometry in the presence of glucose. An image produced by scanning electron microscopy supported the formation of a PNR/GOx complex and the current was increased to 1.58 μA cm(-1) by adding 1mM glucose at an applied potential of -0.5 V. The current was detected by way of PNR-reduced hydrogen peroxide, a product of the glucose oxidation by GOx. The detection limit was 0.67mM (S/N=3). The biosensor containing the graphite rod/PNR/GOx/Nafion detected glucose at various concentrations in mixed samples, which contained interfering molecules. In this study, we report the first expression of R5 fused to glucose oxidase in eukaryotic cells and demonstrate an application of self-entrapped GOx to a glucose biosensor.


Scientific Reports | 2015

A dye-decolorizing peroxidase from Bacillus subtilis exhibiting substrate-dependent optimum temperature for dyes and β-ether lignin dimer

Kyoungseon Min; Gyeongtaek Gong; Han Min Woo; Yunje Kim; Youngsoon Um

In the biorefinery using lignocellulosic biomass as feedstock, pretreatment to breakdown or loosen lignin is important step and various approaches have been conducted. For biological pretreatment, we screened Bacillus subtilis KCTC2023 as a potential lignin-degrading bacterium based on veratryl alcohol (VA) oxidation test and the putative heme-containing dye-decolorizing peroxidase was found in the genome of B. subtilis KCTC2023. The peroxidase from B. subtilis KCTC2023 (BsDyP) was capable of oxidizing various substrates and atypically exhibits substrate-dependent optimum temperature: 30°C for dyes (Reactive Blue19 and Reactive Black5) and 50°C for high redox potential substrates (2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid [ABTS], VA, and veratryl glycerol-β-guaiacyl ether [VGE]) over +1.0 V vs. normal hydrogen electrode. At 50°C, optimum temperature for high redox potential substrates, BsDyP not only showed the highest VA oxidation activity (0.13 Umg−1) among the previously reported bacterial peroxidases but also successfully achieved VGE decomposition by cleaving Cα-Cβ bond in the absence of any oxidative mediator with a specific activity of 0.086 Umg−1 and a conversion rate of 53.5%. Based on our results, BsDyP was identified as the first bacterial peroxidase capable of oxidizing high redox potential lignin-related model compounds, especially VGE, revealing a previously unknown versatility of lignin degrading biocatalyst in nature.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Electrochemical detoxification of phenolic compounds in lignocellulosic hydrolysate for Clostridium fermentation.

Kyung Min Lee; Kyoungseon Min; Okkyoung Choi; Ki Yeon Kim; Han Min Woo; Yunje Kim; Sung Ok Han; Youngsoon Um

Lignocellulosic biomass is being preferred as a feedstock in the biorefinery, but lignocellulosic hydrolysate usually contains inhibitors against microbial fermentation. Among these inhibitors, phenolics are highly toxic to butyric acid-producing and butanol-producing Clostridium even at a low concentration. Herein, we developed an electrochemical polymerization method to detoxify phenolic compounds in lignocellulosic hydrolysate for efficient Clostridium fermentation. After the electrochemical detoxification for 10h, 78%, 77%, 82%, and 94% of p-coumaric acid, ferulic acid, vanillin, and syringaldehyde were removed, respectively. Furthermore, 71% of total phenolics in rice straw hydrolysate were removed without any sugar-loss. Whereas the cell growth and metabolite production of Clostridium tyrobutyricum and Clostridium beijerinckii were completely inhibited in un-detoxified hydrolysate, those in detoxifying rice straw hydrolysate were recovered to 70-100% of the control cultures. The electrochemical detoxification method described herein provides an efficient strategy for producing butanol and butyric acid through Clostridium fermentation with lignocellulosic hydrolysate.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

Overview on the biotechnological production of l-DOPA

Kyoungseon Min; Kyungmoon Park; Don-Hee Park; Young Je Yoo

Abstractl-DOPA (3,4-dihydroxyphenyl-l-alanine) has been widely used as a drug for Parkinson’s disease caused by deficiency of the neurotransmitter dopamine. Since Monsanto developed the commercial process for l-DOPA synthesis for the first time, most of currently supplied l-DOPA has been produced by the asymmetric method, especially asymmetric hydrogenation. However, the asymmetric synthesis shows critical limitations such as a poor conversion rate and a low enantioselectivity. Accordingly, alternative biotechnological approaches have been researched for overcoming the shortcomings: microbial fermentation using microorganisms with tyrosinase, tyrosine phenol-lyase, or p-hydroxyphenylacetate 3-hydroxylase activity and enzymatic conversion by immobilized tyrosinase. Actually, Ajinomoto Co. Ltd commercialized Erwinia herbicola fermentation to produce l-DOPA from catechol. In addition, the electroenzymatic conversion system was recently introduced as a newly emerging scheme. In this review, we aim to not only overview the biotechnological l-DOPA production methods, but also to briefly compare and analyze their advantages and drawbacks. Furthermore, we suggest the future potential of biotechnological l-DOPA production as an industrial process.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Expression and characterization of Pantoea CO dehydrogenase to utilize CO-containing industrial waste gas for expanding the versatility of CO dehydrogenase

Eun Sil Choi; Kyoungseon Min; Geun-Joong Kim; Inchan Kwon; Yong Hwan Kim

Although aerobic CO dehydrogenases (CODHs) might be applicable in various fields, their practical applications have been hampered by low activity and no heterologous expression. We, for the first time, could functionally express recombinant PsCODH in E. coli and obtained a highly concentrated recombinant enzyme using an easy and convenient method. Its electron acceptor spectra, optimum conditions (pH 6.5 and 30 °C), and kinetic parameters (kcat of 12.97 s−1, Km of 0.065 mM, and specific activity of 0.86 Umg−1) were examined. Blast furnace gas (BFG) containing 20% CO, which is a waste gas from the steel-making process, was tested as a substrate for PsCODH. Even with BFG, the recombinant PsCODH retained 88.2% and 108.4% activity compared with those of pure CO and 20% CO, respectively. The results provide not only a promising strategy to utilize CO-containing industrial waste gases as cheap, abundant, and renewable resources but also significant information for further studies about cascade reactions producing value-added chemicals via CO2 as an intermediate produced by a CODH-based CO-utilization system, which would ultimately expand the versatility of CODH.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Conversion of levulinic acid to 2-butanone by acetoacetate decarboxylase from Clostridium acetobutylicum

Kyoungseon Min; Seil Kim; Taewoo Yum; Yunje Kim; Byoung-In Sang; Youngsoon Um


한국생물공학회 학술대회 | 2014

Cleavage of β-O-4 Bond in Lignin Model Compound by a Novel Bacterial Dye-decolorizing Peroxidase from Bacillus substils KCTC2023

Kyoungseon Min; Gyeongtaek Gong; Han-Min Woo; Youngsoon Um


한국생물공학회 학술대회 | 2013

Expression and Characterization of Dye-decolorizing Peroxidase from Bacillus substils KCTC2023 for Lignin Degradation

Kyoungseon Min; Gyeongtaek Gong; Seil Kim; Han Min Woo; Tai Hyun Park; Youngsoon Um


한국생물공학회 학술대회 | 2011

Isolation of mutants in Clostridium tyrobutyricum for improved tolerance to lignin

Kyung Min Lee; Ki-Yeon Kim; Kyoungseon Min; Min-Ho Joe; Youngsoon Um; Byoung-In Sang

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Youngsoon Um

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Byoung-In Sang

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Gyeongtaek Gong

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Han Min Woo

Sungkyunkwan University

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Seil Kim

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Yunje Kim

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Ki-Yeon Kim

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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