4.8 Article

Photosystem I integrated into mesoporous microspheres has enhanced stability and photoactivity in biohybrid solar cells

Journal

MATERIALS TODAY BIO
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mtbio.2021.100122

Keywords

Microsphere; Photosystem I; Lyophilization; Biohybrid solar cell; Encapsulation

Funding

  1. NIH R25 Award [R25GM086761]
  2. Gibson Family Foundation
  3. Tennessee Plant Research Center
  4. Dr Donald L. Akers Faculty Enrichment Fellowship
  5. TN-SCORE program
  6. NSF EPSCoR Grant for Tennessee
  7. US Department of Education Award
  8. National Science Foundation [DGE-0801470, EPS 1004083]
  9. Army Research Laboratory (ARL Contract) [W91 1NF-11-2-0029]

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The study explores the encapsulation of detergent-solubilized PSI in CaCO3 microspheres, producing uniform, monodisperse, mesoporous microspheres. This method proves to be effective in enhancing protein stability and activity, particularly for long-term storage of large membrane proteins.
Isolated proteins, especially membrane proteins, are susceptible to aggregation and activity loss after purification. For therapeutics and biosensors usage, protein stability and longevity are especially important. It has been demonstrated that photosystem I (PSI) can be successfully integrated into biohybrid electronic devices to take advantage of its strong light-driven reducing potential (-1.2V vs. the Standard Hydrogen Electrode). Most devices utilize PSI isolated in a nanosize detergent micelle, which is difficult to visualize, quantitate, and manipulate. Isolated PSI is also susceptible to aggregation and/or loss of activity, especially after freeze/thaw cycles. CaCO3 microspheres (CCMs) have been shown to be a robust method of protein encapsulation for industrial and pharmaceutical applications, increasing the stability and activity of the encapsulated protein. However, CCMs have not been utilized with any membrane protein(s) to date. Herein, we examine the encapsulation of detergent-solubilized PSI in CCMs yielding uniform, monodisperse, mesoporous microspheres. This study reports both the first encapsulation of a membrane protein and also the largest protein to date stabilized by CCMs. These microspheres retain their spectral properties and lumenal surface exposure and are active when integrated into hybrid biophotovoltaic devices. CCMs may be a robust yet simple solution for long-term storage of large membrane proteins, showing success for very large, multisubunit complexes like PSI.

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