Hydrogen-Bonded Supramolecular Nanotrap Enabling the Interfacial Activation of Hosted Enzymes.
Siming HuangJiansheng LiYuhong LinLinjing TongNingyi ZhongAnlian HuangXiaomin MaShuyao HuangWei YiYong ShenGuosheng ChenGangfeng OuyangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Engineering nanotraps to immobilize fragile enzymes provides new insights into designing stable and sustainable biocatalysts. However, the trade-off between activity and stability remains a long-standing challenge due to the inevitable diffusion barrier set up by nanocarriers. Herein, we report a synergetic interfacial activation strategy by virtue of hydrogen-bonded supramolecular encapsulation. The pore wall of the nanotrap, in which the enzyme is encapsulated, is modified with methyl struts in an atomically precise position. This well-designed supramolecular pore results in a synergism of hydrogen-bonded and hydrophobic interactions with the hosted enzyme, and it can modulate the catalytic center of the enzyme into a favorable configuration with high substrate accessibility and binding capability, which shows up to a 4.4-fold reaction rate and 4.9-fold conversion enhancements compared to free enzymes. This work sheds new light on the interfacial activation of enzymes using supramolecular engineering and also showcases the feasibility of interfacial assembly to access hierarchical biocatalysts featuring high activity and stability simultaneously.