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Dive into the research topics where Rodrigo Volcan Almeida is active.

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Featured researches published by Rodrigo Volcan Almeida.


BioMed Research International | 2014

From structure to catalysis: recent developments in the biotechnological applications of lipases.

Cristiane D. Anobom; Anderson S. Pinheiro; Rafael A. De-Andrade; Erika C.G. Aguieiras; Guilherme C. Andrade; Marcelo Victor Holanda Moura; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire

Microbial lipases are highly appreciated as biocatalysts due to their peculiar characteristics such as the ability to utilize a wide range of substrates, high activity and stability in organic solvents, and regio- and/or enantioselectivity. These enzymes are currently being applied in a variety of biotechnological processes, including detergent preparation, cosmetics and paper production, food processing, biodiesel and biopolymer synthesis, and the biocatalytic resolution of pharmaceutical derivatives, esters, and amino acids. However, in certain segments of industry, the use of lipases is still limited by their high cost. Thus, there is a great interest in obtaining low-cost, highly active, and stable lipases that can be applied in several different industrial branches. Currently, the design of specific enzymes for each type of process has been used as an important tool to address the limitations of natural enzymes. Nowadays, it is possible to “order” a “customized” enzyme that has ideal properties for the development of the desired bioprocess. This review aims to compile recent advances in the biotechnological application of lipases focusing on various methods of enzyme improvement, such as protein engineering (directed evolution and rational design), as well as the use of structural data for rational modification of lipases in order to create higher active and selective biocatalysts.


New Biotechnology | 2016

Rhamnolipids in perspective: gene regulatory pathways, metabolic engineering, production and technological forecasting

Leticia Dobler; Leonardo de Figueiredo Vilela; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; Bianca C. Neves

Rhamnolipids have emerged as a very promising class of biosurfactants in the last decades, exhibiting properties of great interest in several industrial applications, and have represented a suitable alternative to chemically-synthesized surfactants. This class of biosurfactants has been extensively studied in recent years, aiming at their large-scale production based on renewable resources, which still require high financial costs. Development of non-pathogenic, high-producing strains has been the focus of a number of studies involving heterologous microbial hosts as platforms. However, the intricate gene regulation network controlling rhamnolipid biosynthesis represents a challenge to metabolic engineering and remains to be further understood and explored. This article provides an overview of the biosynthetic pathways and the main gene regulatory factors involved in rhamnolipid production within Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the prototypal producing species. In addition, we provide a perspective view into the main strategies applied to metabolic engineering and biotechnological production.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Are Lipases Still Important Biocatalysts? A Study of Scientific Publications and Patents for Technological Forecasting.

Karina de Godoy Daiha; Renata Angeli; Sabrina Dias de Oliveira; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida

The great potential of lipases is known since 1930 when the work of J. B. S. Haldane was published. After eighty-five years of studies and developments, are lipases still important biocatalysts? For answering this question the present work investigated the technological development of four important industrial sectors where lipases are applied: production of detergent formulations; organic synthesis, focusing on kinetic resolution, production of biodiesel, and production of food and feed products. The analysis was made based on research publications and patent applications, working as scientific and technological indicators, respectively. Their evolution, interaction, the major players of each sector and the main subject matters disclosed in patent documents were discussed. Applying the concept of technology life cycle, S-curves were built by plotting cumulative patent data over time to monitor the attractiveness of each technology for investment. The results lead to a conclusion that the use of lipases as biocatalysts is still a relevant topic for the industrial sector, but developments are still needed for lipase biocatalysis to reach its full potential, which are expected to be achieved within the third, and present, wave of biocatalysis.


Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2009

Separation and Immobilization of Lipase from Penicillium simplicissimum by Selective Adsorption on Hydrophobic Supports

Aline G. Cunha; Gloria Fernández-Lorente; Melissa L. E. Gutarra; Juliana Vaz Bevilaqua; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; Lucia Moreira Campos Paiva; Roberto Fernandez-Lafuente; Jose M. Guisan; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire

Lipases are an enzyme class of a great importance as biocatalysts applied to organic chemistry. However, it is still necessary to search for new enzymes with special characteristics such as good stability towards high temperatures, organic solvents, and high stereoselectivity presence. The present work’s aim was to immobilize the lipases pool produced by Penicillium simplissicimum, a filamentous fungi strain isolated from Brazilian babassu cake residue. P. simplissicimum lipases were separated into three different fractions using selective adsorption method on different hydrophobic supports (butyl-, phenyl-, and octyl-agarose) at low ionic strength. After immobilization, it was observed that these fractions’ hyperactivation is in the range of 131% to 1133%. This phenomenon probably occurs due to enzyme open form stabilization when immobilized onto hydrophobic supports. Those fractions showed different thermal stability, specificity, and enantioselectivity towards some substrates. Enantiomeric ratio for the hydrolysis of (R,S) 2-O-butyryl-2-phenylacetic acid ranged from 1 to 7.9 for different immobilized P. simplissicimum lipase fractions. Asymmetry factor for diethyl 2-phenylmalonate hydrolysis ranged from 11.8 to 16.4 according to the immobilized P. simplissicimum lipase fractions. Those results showed that sequential adsorption methodology was an efficient strategy to obtain new biocatalysts with different enantioselectivity degrees, thermostability, and specificity prepared with a crude extract produced by a simple and low-cost technology.


Vaccine | 2011

Cloning and expression of protease ClpP from Streptococcus pneumoniae in Escherichia coli: study of the influence of kanamycin and IPTG concentration on cell growth, recombinant protein production and plasmid stability.

Karen Einsfeldt; João Baptista Severo Júnior; Ana Paula Corrêa Argondizzo; Marco Alberto Medeiros; Tito Lívio Moitinho Alves; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; Ariane Leites Larentis

Infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae are one of the main causes of death around the world. In order to address this problem, investigations are being made into the development of a protein-based vaccine. The aims of this study were to clone and express ClpP, a protein from S. pneumoniae serotype 14 in Escherichia coli, to optimize protein expression by using experimental design and to study plasmid segregation in the system. ClpP was cloned into the pET28b vector and expressed in E. coli BL21 Star (DE3). Protein expression was optimized by using central composite design, varying the inducer (IPTG) and kanamycin concentration, with a subsequent analysis being made of the concentration of heterologous protein, cell growth and the fraction of plasmid-bearing cells. In all the experiments, approximately the same concentration of ClpP was expressed in its soluble form, with a mean of 240.4mg/L at the center point. Neither the IPTG concentration nor the kanamycin concentration was found to have any statistically significant influence on protein expression. Also, higher IPTG concentrations were found to have a negative effect on cell growth and plasmid stability. Plasmid segregation was identified in the system under all the concentrations studied. Using statistical analysis, it was possible to ascertain that the procedures for determining plasmid stability (serial dilution and colony counting) were reproducible. It was concluded that the inducer concentration could be reduced tenfold and the antibiotic eliminated from the system without significantly affecting expression levels and with the positive effect of reducing costs.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2007

Exploring the biotechnologial applications in the archaeal domain

Sylvia Maria Campbell Alquéres; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; M.M. Clementino; Ricardo P. Vieira; Welington Inácio Almeida; Orlando B. Martins

Archaea represent a considerable fraction of the prokaryotic world in marine and terrestrial ecosystems, indicating that organisms from this domain might have a large impact on global energy cycles. The extremophilic nature of many archaea has stimulated intense efforts to understand the physiological adaptations for living in extreme environments. Their unusual properties make them a potentially valuable resource in the development of novel biotechnological processes and industrial applications as new pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, nutritional supplements, molecular probes, enzymes, and fine chemicals. In the present mini-review, we show and discuss some exclusive characteristics of Archaea domain and the current knowledge about the biotechnological uses of the archaeal enzymes. The topics are: archaeal characteristics, phylogenetic division, biotechnological applications, isolation and cultivation of new microbes, achievements in genomics, and metagenomic.


Enzyme Research | 2010

Immobilization and Characterization of a Recombinant Thermostable Lipase (Pf2001) from Pyrococcus furiosus on Supports with Different Degrees of Hydrophobicity

Roberta Vieira Branco; Melissa L. E. Gutarra; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida

We studied the immobilization of a recombinant thermostable lipase (Pf2001Δ60) from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus on supports with different degrees of hydrophobicity: butyl Sepabeads and octadecyl Sepabeads. The enzyme was strongly adsorbed in both supports. When it was adsorbed on these supports, the enzyme showed 140 and 237% hyperactivation, respectively. The assessment of storage stability showed that the octadecyl Sepabeads immobilized enzyme showed 100% of residual activity after 30 days of storage. However, the greatest stability at 70°C was obtained in butyl Sepabeads immobilized enzyme, which retained 77% activity after 1 hour incubation. The maximum activity of the immobilized preparations was obtained with the pH between 6 and 7, at 70°C. Thus, this study achieved a new extremophilic biocatalyst with greater stability, for use in several biotechnological processes.


Enzyme Research | 2011

Characterization of the Recombinant Thermostable Lipase (Pf2001) from Pyrococcus furiosus: Effects of Thioredoxin Fusion Tag and Triton X-100

Sylvia Maria Campbell Alquéres; Roberta Vieira Branco; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire; Tito Lívio Moitinho Alves; Orlando B. Martins; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida

In this work, the lipase from Pyrococcus furiosus encoded by ORF PF2001 was expressed with a fusion protein (thioredoxin) in Escherichia coli. The purified enzymes with the thioredoxin tag (TRX−PF2001Δ60) and without the thioredoxin tag (PF2001Δ60) were characterized, and various influences of Triton X-100 were determined. The optimal temperature for both enzymes was 80°C. Although the thioredoxin presence did not influence the optimum temperature, the TRX−PF2001Δ60 presented specific activity twice lower than the enzyme PF2001Δ60. The enzyme PF2001Δ60 was assayed using MUF-acetate, MUF-heptanoate, and MUF-palmitate. MUF-heptanoate was the preferred substrate of this enzyme. The chelators EDTA and EGTA increased the enzyme activity by 97 and 70%, respectively. The surfactant Triton X-100 reduced the enzyme activity by 50% and lowered the optimum temperature to 60°C. However, the thermostability of the enzyme PF2001Δ60 was enhanced with Triton X-100.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Displaying Lipase B from Candida antarctica in Pichia pastoris Using the Yeast Surface Display Approach: Prospection of a New Anchor and Characterization of the Whole Cell Biocatalyst

Marcelo Victor Holanda Moura; Giulia Pontes da Silva; Antônio Carlos de Oliveira Machado; Fernando Araripe Gonçalves Torres; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida

Yeast Surface Display (YSD) is a strategy to anchor proteins on the yeast cell wall which has been employed to increase enzyme stability thus decreasing production costs. Lipase B from Candida antarctica (LipB) is one of the most studied enzymes in the context of industrial biotechnology. This study aimed to assess the biochemical features of this important biocatalyst when immobilized on the cell surface of the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris using the YSD approach. For that purpose, two anchors were tested. The first (Flo9) was identified after a prospection of the P. pastoris genome being related to the family of flocculins similar to Flo1 but significantly smaller. The second is the Protein with Internal Repeats (Pir1) from P. pastoris. An immunolocalization assay showed that both anchor proteins were able to display the reporter protein EGFP in the yeast outer cell wall. LipB was expressed in P. pastoris fused either to Flo9 (FLOLIPB) or Pir1 (PIRLIPB). Both constructions showed hydrolytic activity towards tributyrin (>100 U/mgdcw and >80 U/mgdcw, respectively), optimal hydrolytic activity around 45°C and pH 7.0, higher thermostability at 45°C and stability in organic solvents when compared to a free lipase.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Improving the Thermostability and Optimal Temperature of a Lipase from the Hyperthermophilic Archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus by Covalent Immobilization

Roberta Vieira Branco; Melissa L. E. Gutarra; Jose M. Guisan; Denise Maria Guimarães Freire; Rodrigo Volcan Almeida; Jose M. Palomo

A recombinant thermostable lipase (Pf2001Δ60) from the hyperthermophilic Archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus (PFUL) was immobilized by hydrophobic interaction on octyl-agarose (octyl PFUL) and by covalent bond on aldehyde activated-agarose in the presence of DTT at pH = 7.0 (one-point covalent attachment) (glyoxyl-DTT PFUL) and on glyoxyl-agarose at pH 10.2 (multipoint covalent attachment) (glyoxyl PFUL). The enzymes properties, such as optimal temperature and pH, thermostability, and selectivity, were improved by covalent immobilization. The highest enzyme stability at 70°C for 48 h incubation was achieved for glyoxyl PFUL (around 82% of residual activity), whereas glyoxyl-DTT PFUL maintained around 69% activity, followed by octyl PFUL (27% remaining activity). Immobilization on glyoxyl-agarose improved the optimal temperature to 90°C, while the optimal temperature of octyl PFUL was 70°C. Also, very significant changes in activity with different substrates were found. In general, the covalent bond derivatives were more active than octyl PFUL. The E value also depended substantially on the derivative and the conditions used. It was observed that the reaction of glyoxyl-DTT PFUL using methyl mandelate as a substrate at pH 7 presented the best results for enantioselectivity (E = 22) and enantiomeric excess (ee (%) = 91).

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Denise Maria Guimarães Freire

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Ariane Leites Larentis

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Lucio Ayres Caldas

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Marcelo H. Herbst

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

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Orlando B. Martins

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Sylvia Maria Campbell Alquéres

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Alessandro B. C. Simas

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Aline G. Cunha

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Angelo A.T. da Silva

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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