Coupling protein scaffold and biosilicification: A sustainable and recyclable approach for d-mannitol production via one-step purification and immobilization of multienzymes
Enzymatic synthesis of biochemicals in vitro is vital in synthetic biology for its efficiency, minimal by-products, and easy product separation. However, challenges like enzyme preparation, stability, and reusability persist. Here, we introduced a protein scaffold and biosilicification coupled syste...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of biological macromolecules 2024-06, Vol.269 (Pt 2), p.132196-132196, Article 132196 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Enzymatic synthesis of biochemicals in vitro is vital in synthetic biology for its efficiency, minimal by-products, and easy product separation. However, challenges like enzyme preparation, stability, and reusability persist. Here, we introduced a protein scaffold and biosilicification coupled system, providing a singular process for the purification and immobilization of multiple enzymes. Using d-mannitol as a model, we initially constructed a self-assembling EE/KK protein scaffold for the co-immobilization of glucose dehydrogenase and mannitol dehydrogenase. Under an enzyme-to-scaffold ratio of 1:8, a d-mannitol yield of 0.692 mol/mol was achieved within 4 h, 2.16-fold higher than the free enzymes. The immobilized enzymes retained 70.9 % of the initial joint activity while the free ones diminished nearly to inactivity after 8 h. Furthermore, we incorporated the biosilicification peptide CotB into the EE/KK scaffold, inducing silica deposition, which enabled the one-step purification and immobilization process assisted by Spy/Snoop protein-peptide pairs. The coupled system demonstrated a comparable d-mannitol yield to that of EE/KK scaffold and 1.34-fold higher remaining activities after 36 h. Following 6 cycles of reaction, the immobilized system retained the capability to synthesize 56.4 % of the initial d-mannitol titer. The self-assembly co-immobilization platform offers an effective approach for enzymatic synthesis of d-mannitol and other biochemicals.
•An integrated co-immobilization system was constructed by coupling protein scaffold and biosilicification.•The system could realize one-step purification, immobilization and reuse of multienzymes.•Enzymes immobilized by the system showed superior performances to the free enzymes. |
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ISSN: | 0141-8130 1879-0003 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.132196 |