Front Matter

(Tina Sui) #1

6 Lipase-Catalyzed Synthesis of Regioisomer-


ically Pure Mono- and Diglycerides


B. Aha, M. Berger, B. Jakob, G. Machmu ̈ller, C. Waldinger and M.P. Schneider

6.1 Introduction


Agricultural crops such as oil seeds and numerous cereals represent a considerable

reservoir of useful and low-cost raw materials such as lipids (fats and oils, phospho-

lipids etc.), proteins and carbohydrates.

By selective combination of their molecular constituents (i.e. fatty acids, glycerol,

oligopeptides, amino acids and saccharides) – using both chemical and biocatalytic

methods – a wide variety of surface active materials can be prepared, all of which are

highly biodegradable as a result of their molecular structures (Figure 1).

Lipases are well-established biocatalysts for the enantio- and regioselective for-

mation and hydrolysis of ester bonds in a wide variety of natural and unnatural

substrates. They therefore seemed ideally suited also for the bioconversion of the

above-mentioned plant materials and the formation of combination products with

surface active properties such as partial (mono-)glycerides, N-acylated amino acids

and protein hydrolysates as well as sugar esters (Figure 2).

Figure 1. Surface-active compounds from plant materials.


Enzymesin LipidModification.Editedby UweT. Bornscheuer
Copyright 2000 Wiley-VCHVerlagGmbH& Co. KGaA,Weinheim.ISBN:3-527-30176-3
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