Putting precision and elegance in enzyme immobilisation with bio-orthogonal chemistry

Review (2022)
Author(s)

Xiaolin Pei (Hangzhou Normal University)

Zhiyuan Luo (Hangzhou Normal University)

Li Qiao (Hangzhou Normal University)

Qinjie Xiao (Hangzhou Normal University)

Pengfei Zhang (Hangzhou Normal University)

Anming Wang (Hangzhou Normal University)

Roger Sheldon (University of Witwatersrand, TU Delft - BT/Biocatalysis)

Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Copyright
© 2022 Xiaolin Pei, Zhiyuan Luo, Li Qiao, Qinjie Xiao, Pengfei Zhang, Anming Wang, R.A. Sheldon
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1cs01004b
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Xiaolin Pei, Zhiyuan Luo, Li Qiao, Qinjie Xiao, Pengfei Zhang, Anming Wang, R.A. Sheldon
Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Issue number
16
Volume number
51
Pages (from-to)
7281-7304
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

The covalent immobilisation of enzymes generally involves the use of highly reactive crosslinkers, such as glutaraldehyde, to couple enzyme molecules to each other or to carriers through, for example, the free amino groups of lysine residues, on the enzyme surface. Unfortunately, such methods suffer from a lack of precision. Random formation of covalent linkages with reactive functional groups in the enzyme leads to disruption of the three dimensional structure and accompanying activity losses. This review focuses on recent advances in the use of bio-orthogonal chemistry in conjunction with rec-DNA to affect highly precise immobilisation of enzymes. In this way, cost-effective combination of production, purification and immobilisation of an enzyme is achieved, in a single unit operation with a high degree of precision. Various bio-orthogonal techniques for putting this precision and elegance into enzyme immobilisation are elaborated. These include, for example, fusing (grafting) peptide or protein tags to the target enzyme that enable its immobilisation in cell lysate or incorporating non-standard amino acids that enable the application of bio-orthogonal chemistry.