4.8 Article

Faster Surface Ligation Reactions Improve Immobilized Enzyme Structure and Activity

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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
卷 143, 期 18, 页码 7154-7163

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c02375

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资金

  1. U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency [HDTRA1-16-1-0045]
  2. National Science Foundation [NSF-1518265]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01GM131168]
  4. Soft Materials Research Center [NSF-MRSEC DMR 1420736]

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The efficiency of ligation reactions plays a crucial role in maintaining the activity and structure of enzymes on solid surfaces. Limiting enzyme exploration of surfaces may overcome the challenge of enzyme inactivation during integration. Increasing the rate constant of surface ligation reactions can enhance the probability of immobilization with reactive surface sites.
During integration into materials, the inactivation of enzymes as a result of their interaction with nanometer size denaturing hotspots on surfaces represents a critical challenge. This challenge, which has received far less attention than improving the long-term stability of enzymes, may be overcome by limiting the exploration of surfaces by enzymes. One way this may be accomplished is through increasing the rate constant of the surface ligation reaction and thus the probability of immobilization with reactive surface sites (i.e., ligation efficiency). Here, the connection between ligation reaction efficiency and the retention of enzyme structure and activity was investigated by leveraging the extremely fast reaction of strained trans-cyclooctene (sTCOs) and tetrazines (Tet). Remarkably, upon immobilization via Tet-sTCO chemistry, carbonic anhydrase (CA) retained 77% of its solution-phase activity, while immobilization via less efficient reaction chemistries, such as thiol-maleimide and azide-dibenzocyclooctyne, led to activity retention of only 46% and 27%, respectively. Dynamic single-molecule fluorescence tracking methods further revealed that longer surface search distances prior to immobilization >0.5 mu m) dramatically increased the probability of CA unfolding. Notably, the CA distance to immobilization was significantly reduced through the use of Tet-sTCO chemistry, which correlated with the increased retention of structure and activity of immobilized CA compared to the use of slower ligation chemistries. These findings provide an unprecedented insight into the role of ligation reaction efficiency in mediating the exploration of denaturing hotspots on surfaces by enzymes, which, in turn, may have major ramifications in the creation of functional biohybrid materials.

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