4.8 Article

Stable and Simple Immobilization of Proteinase K Inside Glass Tubes and Microfluidic Channels

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 46, Pages 25970-25980

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b09301

Keywords

enzyme; protease; immobilization; adsorption; dendronized polymer; conjugate; flow reactor; microchip

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Engyodontium album proteinase K (proK) is widely used for degrading proteinaceous impurities during the isolation of nucleic acids from biological samples, or in proteomics and prion research. Toward applications of proK in flow reactors, a simple method for the stable immobilization of proK inside glass micropipette tubes was developed. The immobilization of the enzyme was achieved by adsorption of a dendronized polymer-enzyme conjugate from aqueous solution. This conjugate was first synthesized from a polycationic dendronized polymer (denpol) and proK and consisted, on average, of 2000 denpol repeating units and 140 proK molecules, which were attached along the denpol chain via stable bis-aryl hydrazone bonds. Although the immobilization of proK inside the tube was based on nonspecific, noncovalent interactions only, the immobilized proK did not leak from the tube and remained active during prolonged storage at 4 degrees C and during continuous operation at 25 degrees C and pH = 7.0. The procedure developed was successfully applied for the immobilization of proK on a glass/PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) microchip, which is a requirement for applications in the field of proK-based protein analysis with such type of microfluidic devices.

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