Construction and Characterization of Protein-Encapsulated Electrospun Fibermats Prepared from a Silica/Poly(γ-glutamate) Hybrid

Protein-encapsulated fibermats are an attractive platform for protein-based bioactive materials. However, the choice of methods is still limited and not applicable to a wide range of proteins. In this study, we studied new polymeric materials for constructing protein-encapsulated fibermats, in which...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2016-01, Vol.32 (1), p.221-229
Hauptverfasser: Koeda, Shuhei, Ichiki, Kentaro, Iwanaga, Norihiko, Mizuno, Koji, Shibata, Masahide, Obata, Akiko, Kasuga, Toshihiro, Mizuno, Toshihisa
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container_end_page 229
container_issue 1
container_start_page 221
container_title Langmuir
container_volume 32
creator Koeda, Shuhei
Ichiki, Kentaro
Iwanaga, Norihiko
Mizuno, Koji
Shibata, Masahide
Obata, Akiko
Kasuga, Toshihiro
Mizuno, Toshihisa
description Protein-encapsulated fibermats are an attractive platform for protein-based bioactive materials. However, the choice of methods is still limited and not applicable to a wide range of proteins. In this study, we studied new polymeric materials for constructing protein-encapsulated fibermats, in which protein molecules are encapsulated within the nanofibers of fibermats without causing deleterious changes to protein structure or function. We constructed a protein-encapsulated fibermat using the poly­(γ-glutamate) (PGA)/(3-glycidyloxypropyl)-trimethoxysilane (GPTMS) hybrid as a precursor for electrospinning. Because the PGA/GPTMS hybrid is water-soluble, protein molecules can be added to the precursor in an aqueous solution, significantly enhancing protein stability. Polycondensation during electrospinning (in-flight polycondensation) makes the obtained fibermats water-insoluble, which stabilizes the fibermat structure such that it is resistant to degradation in aqueous buffer. The molecular structure of the PGA/GPTMS hybrid gives rise to unique molecular permeability, which alters the selectivity and specificity of biochemical reactions involving the encapsulated enzymes; lower molecular-weight (MW) substrates can permeate the nanofibers, promoting enzyme activity, but higher MW substrates such as inhibitor peptides cannot permeate the nanofibers, suppressing enzyme activity. We present an effective method of encapsulating bioactive molecules while maintaining their structure and function, increasing the versatility of electrospun fibermats for constructing various bioactive materials.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b02862
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subjects Nanofibers - chemistry
Polyglutamic Acid - analogs & derivatives
Polyglutamic Acid - chemistry
Proteins - chemistry
Silanes - chemistry
Silicon Dioxide - chemistry
title Construction and Characterization of Protein-Encapsulated Electrospun Fibermats Prepared from a Silica/Poly(γ-glutamate) Hybrid
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