Susan K. Fager
DuPont
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Featured researches published by Susan K. Fager.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1999
John E. Gavagan; Robert DiCosimo; Amy Eisenberg; Susan K. Fager; Patrick W. Folsom; Eugenia Costa Hann; K. J. Schneider; Robert D. Fallon
Abstract A Gram-negative bacterial strain, identified as Acidovorax facilis strain 72W, has been isolated from soil by enrichment using 2-ethylsuccinonitrile as the sole nitrogen source. This strain grows on a variety of aliphatic mono- and dinitriles. Experiments using various heating regimes indicate that nitrile hydratase, amidase and nitrilase activities are present. The nitrilase is efficient at hydrolyzing aliphatic dinitriles to cyanoacid intermediates. It has a strong bias for C3–C6 dinitriles over mononitriles of the same chain length. Whole, resting cell hydrolysis of 2-methylglutaronitrile results in 4-cyanopentanoic acid and 2-methylglutaric acid as the major products. Heating, at least 20 min at 50 °C, eliminates nitrile hydratase and amidase activities, resulting in greater than 97% selectivity to 4-cyanopentanoic acid. The nitrilase activity has good heat stability, showing a half-life of 22.7 h at 50 °C and a temperature optimum of at least 65 °C for activity. The strain has been deposited as ATCC 55746.
Journal of Molecular Catalysis B-enzymatic | 2001
F.B. Cooling; Susan K. Fager; Robert D. Fallon; Patrick W. Folsom; F.G. Gallagher; John E. Gavagan; Eugenia Costa Hann; Frank Edward Herkes; R.L. Phillips; A. Sigmund; L.W. Wagner; W. Wu; Robert DiCosimo
Abstract A chemoenzymatic process for the preparation of 1,5-dimethyl-2-piperidone (1,5-DMPD) from 2-methylglutaronitrile (MGN) has been demonstrated. MGN was first hydrolyzed to 4-cyanopentanoic acid (4-CPA) ammonium salt using the nitrilase activity of immobilized Acidovorax facilis 72W cells. The hydrolysis reaction produced 4-CPA ammonium salt with greater than 98% regioselectivity at 100% conversion, and at concentrations of 170–210 g 4-CPA/l. Catalyst productivities of at least 1000 g 4-CPA/g dry cell weight (dcw) of immobilized cells were achieved by recycling the immobilized-cell catalyst in consecutive stirred-batch reactions. After recovery of the immobilized cell catalyst for reuse, the 4-CPA ammonium salt in the aqueous product mixture was directly converted to 1,5-DMPD by low-pressure catalytic hydrogenation in the presence of added methylamine.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1994
John E. Seip; Susan K. Fager; John E. Gavagan; David Leroy Anton; Robert Di Cosimo
A variety of methods for the immobilization of glycolate oxidase have been examined for the preparation of a catalyst for the oxidation of glycolic acid to glyoxylic acid. The co-immobilization of glycolate oxidase and catalase on oxirane acrylic beads produced a catalyst which was stable to the reaction conditions used for the oxidation, where glycolic acid and oxygen are reacted in aqueous solution in the presence of the immobilized enzyme catalyst and ethylenediamine. Under optimum reaction conditions, 99% yields of glyoxylic acid were obtained at greater than 99% conversion of glycolic acid, and the recovery and reuse of the co-immobilized enzyme catalyst was demonstrated.
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 1990
John E. Seip; Susan K. Fager; R. Grosz; John E. Gavagan; Robert DiCosimo; David Leroy Anton
Abstract Nucleoside monophosphate kinase (NMPK, EC 2.7.4.4, from bovine liver or yeast) has been used to prepare cytidine 5′-diphosphate (CDP). The enzyme catalyses the reversible (Keq ≅ 1) reaction of a pyrimidine nucleoside 5′-monophosphate and ATP to produce a nucleoside 5′-diphosphate and ADP. Equilibrium mixtures of CMP, CDP, ADP, and ATP were obtained from the reaction of CMP, ATP, and magnesium chloride with NMPK. The soluble enzyme could be recovered and reused but an enzyme activity half-life of only ca. 2 days was observed. Stabilization of enzyme activity by immobilization via covalent bonding to a carrier surface, and by gel entrapment, was examined. Immobilization yields were optimized by varying protein loading, pH, temperature, ionic strength, type of buffer, and concentration of enzyme substrates. The highest yields of immobilized NMPK activity were obtained by gel entrapment in a poly(acrylamide-co-N-acryloxysuccinimide) gel crosslinked with triethylenetetramine (PAN-500); NMPK immobilized using this method exhibited increased stability of enzyme activity compared to the unimmobilized enzyme.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1998
John E. Gavagan; Susan K. Fager; Robert D. Fallon; Patrick W. Folsom; Frank Edward Herkes; Amy Eisenberg; Eugenia Costa Hann; Robert DiCosimo
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1995
John E. Gavagan; Susan K. Fager; John E. Seip; Mark S. Payne; David Leroy Anton; Robert Dicosimo
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1993
John E. Seip; Susan K. Fager; John E. Gavagan; Lawrence W. Gosser; David Leroy Anton; Robert DiCosimo
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1997
John E. Gavagan; Susan K. Fager; John E. Seip; Dawn S. Clark; Mark S. Payne; David Leroy Anton; Robert Dicosimo
Archive | 2001
Robert DiCosimo; Susan K. Fager; John E. Gavagan
Archive | 2000
Robert Dicosimo; Eugenia Costa Hann; Amy Eisenberg; Susan K. Fager; Neal E. Perkins; F. Glenn Gallagher; Susan M. Cooper; John E. Gavagan; Barry Stieglitz; Susan M. Hennessey