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catalysis of heterogeneous reactions in water-soluble as well as insoluble systems. Further, lipases have the properties like chemo-specificity, region-specificity, and stereo-specificity [111]. When classification is made based on region-specificity, there come three classes of lipases: 1) non-specific lipases, 2) 1,3-specific lipases, and 3) fatty acid-specific lipases. Non-specific lipases have ability to attach with all the possible positions of triglycerides to give FFAs and glycerol. The intermediates of the reaction, diglycerides, and monoglycerides do not accumulate in the reaction as they are instantly hydrolysed into fatty acids and glycerol [112]. 1,3-specific lipases are specific for the 1 and 3 positions of triglycerides and remove fatty acids from these positions. 1,3-specific lipases carry out the conversion of triglyceride to diglycerides much faster than diglyceride to monoglyceride [113]. Fatty acid-specific lipases carry out hydrolysis of a specific type of esters which have double bonded long chains of fatty acids in cis position between C-9 and C-1. Hydrolysis of esters with unsaturated fatty acids occur slowly and such class of lipases is not much common [114]. All the hydrolytic enzymes including lipases have common folding pattern involve in a hydrolytic activity called α/β hydrolase fold which is made up of a β sheet of eight strands (one of which is antiparallel while remaining seven strands are parallel) connected by α helices. Histidine residue, catalytic acid residue and Nucleophilic residue are present in α/β hydrolase fold. Pentapeptide sequence (Gly-X-Ser-X-Gly) which is a highly conserved in most of the lipases involved in the construction of ‘nucleophilic elbow’ which is a typical β-turn-α motif having active nucleophilic serine residue between a β strand and an α-helix. Catalytic triad made up of amino acids like histidine, serine, and aspartic acid or glutamic acid build the active site of lipases. The same catalytic triad is seen in serine proteases predicting common catalytic mechanism in them. Amphiphilic α helix peptide sequence forms a lid or flap which covers the active site of lipase and has a structural variability depending upon the lipase source organism. Changes in the structure of the lid are responsible for the activation/inactivation of lipases [114]. Changes in the conformation of lipase structure as well as the quality and quantity of interface being used in the reaction are responsible for the activation of lipase. When the lipase enzyme meets the oil/water interface there occur some changes in lipase structure that results in its activation. For the activation of lipase first, the lid opens to uncover the active site of lipase upon its contact with the ordered interface [115]. Due to this restructuring of lipase, electrophilic region is created around serine residue present in active site, lid hydrophilic side which was exposed in native form now partly buried inside the polar cavity and hydrophobic side of lid completely exposed, thus creating a non-polar surface around the active site for efficient attachment of lipid interface with it [115].

      1.7.1 Mechanisms of Lipase Action

      Lipases interact with ester bonds of their substrate like acylglycerols to catalyze the reactions of hydrolysis, synthesis, and transesterification. Triglycerides, which are insoluble and long chained fatty acids, are precisely catalyzed by lipases [113]. Lipase carries out triglyceride oil transesterification with methanol in three reversible steps with the first step for conversion of triglycerides to diglycerides followed by the second step of diglycerides to monoglycerides conversion, and finally, monoglycerides convert into glycerol molecules. Here, each conversion step produces one FAME molecule; hence, a total of three FAME molecule are produced from one triglyceride [116]. Two models are mainly under discussion to describe the kinetics mechanism for esterification reactions, Michaelis-Menten kinetics and Ping Pong Bi Bi model. Lipase catalyzed esterification mainly elaborated by Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism which is a bi-substrate reaction that releases two products. It involves following steps: 1) acyl-donor donate their acyl group to the enzyme resulting in the formation of acyl-enzyme complex, 2) release of the water molecule as a product, 3) binding of acyl acceptor with the enzyme complex, and 4) release of ester [117, 118]. Many researchers made some modifications in this model depending upon inhibiting factors [118]. The catalytic activity begins with the transient tetrahedral intermediate formation with a negatively charged carbonyl oxygen atom. The reaction between the hydroxyl group oxygen present in nucleophilic serine residue of lipase enzyme and activated carbonyl carbon of the substrate involved building this transient tetrahedral intermediate. The intermediate thus formed is stabilized by its interaction with two peptide NH groups. After that nucleophilic hydroxyl group of water react with the carbonyl carbon of acyl-enzyme complex resulting in the formation of acyl product and enzyme is released for further catalysis [119].

      1.7.2 Efficient Lipase Sources for Biodiesel Producing Biocatalyst

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