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Stability-Controllable Self-Immobilization of Carbonic Anhydrase Fused with a Silica-Binding Tag onto Diatom Biosilica for Enzymatic CO2 Capture and Utilization

Title
Stability-Controllable Self-Immobilization of Carbonic Anhydrase Fused with a Silica-Binding Tag onto Diatom Biosilica for Enzymatic CO2 Capture and Utilization
Authors
Kim, SuhyeokJoo, Kye IlJo, Byung HoonCha, Hyung Joon
Ewha Authors
주계일
SCOPUS Author ID
주계일scopus
Issue Date
2020
Journal Title
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
ISSN
1944-8244JCR Link

1944-8252JCR Link
Citation
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES vol. 12, no. 24, pp. 27055 - 27063
Keywords
carbonic anhydrasesilica-binding tagbiosilicaHydrogenovibrio marinusenzyme immobilizationmactomolecular crowding
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Exploiting carbonic anhydrase (CA), an enzyme that catalyzes the hydration of CO2, is a powerful route for ecofriendly and cost-effective carbon capture and utilization. For successful industrial applications, the stability and reusability of CA should be improved, which necessitates enzyme immobilization. Herein, the ribosomal protein L2 (Si-tag) from Escherichia coli was utilized for the immobilization of CA onto diatom biosilica, a promising renewable support material. The Si-tag was redesigned (L2NC) and genetically fused to CA from the marine bacterium Hydrogenovibrio marinus (hmCA). One-step self-immobilization of hmCA-L2NC onto diatom biosilica by simple mixing was successfully achieved via Si-tag-mediated strong binding, showing multilayer adsorption with a maximal loading of 1.4 wt %. The immobilized enzyme showed high reusability and no enzyme leakage even under high temperature conditions. The activity of hmCA-L2NC was inversely proportional to the enzyme loading, while the stability was directly proportional to the enzyme loading. This discovered activity-stability trade-off phenomenon could be attributed to macromolecular crowding on the highly dense surface of the enzyme-immobilized biosilica. Collectively, our system not only facilitates the stability-controllable self-immobilization of enzyme via Si-tag on a diatom biosilica support for the robust, facile, and green construction of stable biocatalysts, but is also a unique model for studying the macromolecular crowding effect on surface-immobilized enzymes.
DOI
10.1021/acsami.0c03804
Appears in Collections:
공과대학 > 화공신소재공학과 > Journal papers
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