Bicontinuous Nanoporous Frameworks: Caged Longevity for Enzymes.
Jae-Sung BaeEunkyung JeonSu-Young MoonWangsuk OhSun-Young HanJeong Hun LeeSung Yun YangDong-Myung KimJi-Woong ParkPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2016)
The preparation of bicontinuous nanoporous covalent frameworks, which are promising for caging active enzymes, is demonstrated. The frameworks have three- dimensionally continuous, hydrophilic pores with widths varying between 5 and 30 nm. Enzymes were infiltrated into the bicontinuous pore by applying a pressured enzyme solution. The new materials and methods allowed the amount of caged proteins to be controlled precisely. The resulting enzyme-loaded framework films could be recycled many times with nearly no loss of catalytic activity. Entropic trapping of proteins by a bicontinuous pore with the right size distribution is an unprecedented strategy toward facile in vitro utilization of biocatalysts.