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"Mendes, Adriano"
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SARS-CoV-2 Reverse Zoonoses to Pumas and Lions, South Africa
2022
Reverse-zoonotic infections of severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) from humans to wildlife species internationally raise concern over the emergence of new variants in animals. A better understanding of the transmission dynamics and pathogenesis in susceptible species will mitigate the risk to humans and wildlife occurring in Africa. Here we report infection of an exotic puma (July 2020) and three African lions (July 2021) in the same private zoo in Johannesburg, South Africa. One Health genomic surveillance identified transmission of a Delta variant from a zookeeper to the three lions, similar to those circulating in humans in South Africa. One lion developed pneumonia while the other cases had mild infection. Both the puma and lions remained positive for SARS-CoV-2 RNA for up to 7 weeks.
Journal Article
Recent advances and future prospects for biolubricant base stocks production using lipases as environmentally friendly catalysts: a mini-review
by
Mendes, Adriano A
,
Tardioli, Paulo W
,
Soares, Cleide M. F
in
Biodegradability
,
Biodegradation
,
Biomedical materials
2023
In recent years, fluctuating global fossil fuel market prices and growing concern about environmental pollution have increased efforts to obtain novel value-added products from renewable agricultural biomass. To this end, a wide variety of triacylglycerols (edible and non-edible oils and fats) and their derivatives (free fatty acids or monoalkyl esters) stand out as promising feedstocks for the production of biolubricant base stocks, due to their biodegradability, excellent physicochemical properties, and sustainable nature. These raw materials can be transformed into biolubricants using chemical or biochemical (lipases) catalysts, with the enzymatic production of biolubricants using lipases as catalysts being recognized as an environmentally friendly approach. The present mini-review highlights recent advances in this field, published in the last three years. The different chemical modification processes used to develop a wide variety of industrial biolubricant base stocks are comprehensively reviewed, with exploration of future prospects for industrial production via the enzymatic route. This study contributes to the current state-of-the-art, identifying relevant research questions and providing important technical information for new applications of lipases in oleochemical manufacturing industries.
Journal Article
Immobilized Lipases on Functionalized Silica Particles as Potential Biocatalysts for the Synthesis of Fructose Oleate in an Organic Solvent/Water System
by
Giordano, Raquel
,
Mendes, Adriano
,
Tardioli, Paulo
in
Biocatalysis
,
Biocatalysts
,
Enzyme Stability
2017
Lipases from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) and Pseudomonas fluorescens (PFL) wereimmobilized on functionalized silica particles aiming their use in the synthesis of fructose oleate in a tert‐butyl alcohol/water system. Silica particles were chemically modified with octyl (OS), octyl plus glutaraldehyde (OSGlu), octyl plus glyoxyl(OSGlx), and octyl plus epoxy groups(OSEpx). PFL was hyperactivated on all functionalized supports (more than 100% recovered activity) using low protein loading (1 mg/g), however, for TLL, this phenomenon was observed only using octyl‐silica (OS). All prepared biocatalysts exhibited high stability by incubating in tert‐butyl alcohol (half‐lives around 50 h at 65 °C). The biocatalysts prepared using OS and OSGlu as supports showed excellent performance in the synthesis of fructose oleate. High estersynthesis was observed when a small amount of water (1%, v/v) was added to the organic phase, allowing an ester productivity until five times (0.88–0.96 g/L.h) higher than in the absence of water (0.18–0.34 g/L.h) under fixed enzyme concentration (0.51 IU/g of solvent). Maximum ester productivity (16.1–18.1 g/L.h) was achieved for 30 min of reaction catalyzed by immobilized lipases on OS and OSGlu at 8.4 IU/mL of solvent. Operational stability tests showed satisfactory stability after four consecutive cycles of reaction.
Journal Article
Alphavirus Nucleocapsid Packaging and Assembly
2018
Alphavirus nucleocapsids are assembled in the cytoplasm of infected cells from 240 copies of the capsid protein and the approximately 11 kb positive strand genomic RNA. However, the challenge of how the capsid specifically selects its RNA package and assembles around it has remained an elusive one to solve. In this review, we will summarize what is known about the alphavirus capsid protein, the packaging signal, and their roles in the mechanism of packaging and assembly. We will review the discovery of the packaging signal and how there is as much evidence for, as well as against, its requirement to specify packaging of the genomic RNA. Finally, we will compare this model with those of other viral systems including particular reference to a relatively new idea of RNA packaging based on the presence of multiple minimal packaging signals throughout the genome known as the two stage mechanism. This review will provide a basis for further investigating the fundamental ways of how RNA viruses are able to select their own cargo from the relative chaos that is the cytoplasm.
Journal Article
Biolubricant Production from Several Oleaginous Feedstocks Using Lipases as Catalysts: Current Scenario and Future Perspectives
by
Mendes, Adriano A
,
Bolina Iara C A
,
Gomes Raphael A B
in
Biocatalysts
,
Biodegradability
,
Biodegradation
2021
In recent years, biolubricants have been gaining further prominence than conventional petroleum-based lubricants. This trend is observed in almost all sectors relying on these products, regardless of their applications. Environmental problems caused by coventional lubricants and the depletion of oil reserves that have led to the need for renewable and biodegradable lubricants are among the factors that contribute to such growing trend. Biolubricants have several advantages over mineral oil lubricants such as high biodegradability, low toxicity, excellent lubricating performance, and minimal impact on the environment and human health. In addition, they can be produced using several types of oleaginous feedstocks and distinct chemical reactions that can be efficiently catalyzed by lipases, which make them quite attractive in the context of Green Chemistry. Thereby, this review describes different aspects of biolubricants by detailing their main applications, properties, uses, and potential feedstocks such as vegetable oils. In this review, chemical modification of their structures using different routes has been highlighted in order to overcome a few limitations for direct application of oleaginuous feedstocks as biolubricants. It also depicts the progress of enzymatic catalysis and immobilization protocols for preparing heterogenous biocatalysts (immobilized lipases), once it is a promising route to obtain a variety of biolubricants based on recent studies described in available literature. Furthermore, future prospects and challenges for enzymatic biolubricant production on an industrial scale are also reviewed.
Journal Article
Kinetic and thermodynamic studies on the thermal inactivation of lipase immobilized on glutaraldehyde-activated rice husk silica
by
Bolina, Iara C. A
,
Mendes, Adriano A
in
Aminopropyltriethoxysilane
,
Biocatalysts
,
Catalytic activity
2024
The objective of this study was to obtain sufficient information on the thermal stabilization of a food-grade lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus (TLL) using the immobilization technique. To do this, a new non-porous support was prepared via the sequential extraction of SiO2 from rice husks, followed by functionalization with (3-aminopropyl) triethoxysilane – 3-APTES (Amino–SiO2), and activation with glutaraldehyde – GA (GA-Amino-SiO2). We evaluated the influence of GA concentration, which varied from 0.25% v v−1 to 4% v v−1, on the immobilization parameters and enzyme thermal stabilization. The thermal inactivation parameters for both biocatalyst forms (soluble or immobilized TLL) were calculated by fitting a non-first-order enzyme inactivation kinetic model to the experimental data. According to the results, TLL was fully immobilized on the external support surface activated with different GA concentrations using an initial protein load of 5 mg g−1. A sharp decrease of hydrolytic activity was observed from 216.6 ± 12.4 U g−1 to 28.6 ± 0.9 U g−1 of after increasing the GA concentration from 0.25% v v−1 to 4.0% v v−1. The support that was prepared using a GA concentration at 0.5% v v−1 provided the highest stabilization of TLL – 31.6-times more stable than its soluble form at 60 °C. The estimations of the thermodynamic parameters, e.g., inactivation energy (Ed), enthalpy (ΔH#), entropy (ΔS#), and the Gibbs energy (ΔG#) values, confirmed the enzyme stabilization on the external support surface at temperatures ranging from 50 to 65 °C. These results show promising applications for this new heterogeneous biocatalyst in industrial processes given the high catalytic activity and thermal stability.
Journal Article
Performance of Different Immobilized Lipases in the Syntheses of Short- and Long-Chain Carboxylic Acid Esters by Esterification Reactions in Organic Media
by
De Lima, Lionete
,
Fernandez-Lafuente, Roberto
,
Giordano, Raquel
in
Biocatalysts
,
esterification
,
flavor esters
2018
Short-chain alkyl esters and sugar esters are widely used in the food, pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries due to their flavor and emulsifying characteristics, respectively. Both compounds can be synthesized via biocatalysis using lipases. This work aims to compare the performance of commercial lipases covalently attached to dry acrylic beads functionalized with oxirane groups (lipases from Candida antarctica type B—IMMCALB-T2-350, Pseudomonas fluorescens—IMMAPF-T2-150, and Thermomyces lanuginosus—IMMTLL-T2-150) and a home-made biocatalyst (lipase from Pseudomonas fluorescens adsorbed onto silica coated with octyl groups, named PFL-octyl-silica) in the syntheses of short- and long-chain carboxylic acid esters. Esters with flavor properties were synthetized by esterification of acetic and butyl acids with several alcohols (e.g., ethanol, 1-butanol, 1-hexanol, and isoamyl alcohol), and sugar esters were synthetized by esterification of oleic and lauric acids with fructose and lactose. All biocatalysts showed similar performance in the syntheses of short-chain alkyl esters, with conversions ranging from 88.9 to 98.4%. However, in the syntheses of sugar esters the performance of PFL-octyl-silica was almost always lower than the commercial IMMCALB-T2-350, whose conversion was up to 96% in the synthesis of fructose oleate. Both biocatalysts showed high operational stability in organic media, thus having great potential for biotransformations.
Journal Article
Kinetic and thermodynamic studies on the enzymatic synthesis of wax ester catalyzed by lipase immobilized on glutaraldehyde-activated rice husk particles
2018
Commercial lipase from Thermomyces lanuginosus has been immobilized on glutaraldehyde-activated rice husk particles via covalent attachment. It was reached maximum immobilized protein concentration of 27.5 ± 1.8 mg g−1 of dry support using the initial protein loading of 40 mg g−1 of support. The immobilized biocatalyst was used to synthesize cetyl oleate (wax ester) via direct esterification of oleic acid and cetyl alcohol. The influence of relevant factors on ester synthesis, such as reaction temperature, biocatalyst concentration, presence or lack of hydrophobic organic solvents, acid:alcohol molar ratio, and reaction time has been evaluated. The experimental data were well fitted to a second-order reversible kinetic model to determine apparent kinetic constants. Thermodynamic studies have revealed that the reaction was a spontaneous and endothermic process. Under optimal experimental conditions, it was observed maximum ester conversion of 90.2 ± 0.6% in 9 h of reaction time in hexane medium using 1 M of each reactant (cetyl alcohol and oleic acid), at 50 °C and biocatalyst concentration of 15% m/v of reaction mixture. Similar conversion (91.5 ± 0.8%) in a solvent-free system was also obtained within 24 h of reaction. The biocatalyst retained 85% of its initial activity after 12 cycles within 9 h of reaction in hexane medium. The physicochemical properties of purified ester have been determined in accordance with ASTM standards. The results indicate that the prepared biocatalyst has great potential for wax ester synthesis due to its satisfactory catalytic activity and operational stability.
Journal Article
Changes in Prevalence and Seasonality of Pathogens Identified in Acute Respiratory Tract Infections in Hospitalised Individuals in Rural and Urban Settings in South Africa; 2018–2022
2024
Severe acute respiratory tract infections (SARIs) has been well described in South Africa with seasonal patterns described for influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), while others occur year-round (rhinovirus and adenovirus). This prospective syndromic hospital-based surveillance study describes the prevalence and impact of public interventions on the seasonality of other respiratory pathogens during the coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic. This occurred from August 2018 to April 2022, with 2595 patients who met the SARS case definition and 442 controls, from three sentinel urban and rural hospital sites in South Africa. Naso/oro-pharyngeal (NP/OP) swabs were tested using the FastTrack Diagnostics® Respiratory pathogens 33 (RUO) kit. Descriptive statistics, odds ratios, and univariate/multivariate analyses were used. Rhinovirus (14.80%, 228/1540) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (28.50%, 439/1540) were most frequently detected in NP/OP swabs and in children <1 years old (35%, 648/1876). Among others, pathogens associated with SARI cases causing disease were influenza A&B, HRV, RSV, hCoV 229e, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Pre-COVID-19, seasonal trends of these pathogens correlated with previous years, with RSV and influenza A seasons only resuming after the national lockdown (2021). It is evident that stringent lockdown conditions have severe impacts on the prevalence of respiratory tract infections.
Journal Article
Optimization of free fatty acid production by enzymatic hydrolysis of vegetable oils using a non-commercial lipase from Geotrichum candidum
by
Basso, Rodrigo C
,
Hirata, Daniela B
,
Mendes, Adriano A
in
Acid production
,
Fatty acids
,
Geotrichum candidum
2019
This study aimed to optimize free fatty acid production by enzymatic hydrolysis of cottonseed, olive and palm kernel oils in stirred-tank reactors using a lipase from Geotrichum candidum (GCL-I). The effect of pH, temperature and substrate concentration on the hydrolytic activity of GCL-I using these vegetable oils was investigated. Thermal stability tests and thermodynamic studies were also performed. A complete hydrolysis of cottonseed oil was obtained after 120 min of reaction, while for olive and palm kernel maximum hydrolysis percentage was 96.4% and 60.1%, respectively. GCL-I exhibited the highest activity in the hydrolysis of vegetable oils that are rich in unsaturated-fatty acids (cottonseed and olive oils). Under optimal conditions (46.8% m/m of oil, 6.6 U/g of the reaction mixture at 40 °C), complete cottonseed oil hydrolysis was observed at 60 min of reaction performed in an emulsifier-free system with no buffer.
Journal Article