Using Wool Keratin Derived Metallo-Nanozymes as a Robust Antioxidant Catalyst to Scavenge Reactive Oxygen Species Generated by Smoking.
Fei XuYonghua TangHao WangHongbo DengYanyan HuangChaoyu FanJiachen ZhaoChangxu LinYouhui LinPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Self-assembled nanostructures based on biomolecules (e.g., proteins and amino acids) and metal ions have promising applications in mimicking the nanostructure, properties, and functions of natural enzymes. Herein, a metal ion-mediated self-assembly method for constructing catalytically active Cu-wool-keratin (CuWK) two-dimensional nanozymes is presented. Specifically, by introducing copper ions as abiological cofactors, WK can serve as a protein scaffold to design and create Cu catalytic sites. The optimized hybrids with Cu-WK coordination framework exhibit significant superoxide dismutases-like activity, catalase-like activity, and hydroxyl radical scavenging ability. These combined antioxidant activities make CuWK a robust nanozyme to effectively remove various reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this work, the as-prepared CuWK as a new additive can be integrated into a cigarette filter system to effectively remove the produced ROS from the burning of tobacco. More importantly, the CuWK nanozymes as a critical element can be further utilized to construct a recycling cigarette holder. Therefore, the present work shows that nanozymes with advanced catalytic capabilities can be constructed by self-assembly of metal ions and proteins, thus facilitating the rational design and discovery of this kind of artificial metalloenzymes.