Immobilization of EreB on Acid-Modified Palygorskite for Highly Efficient Degradation of Erythromycin.
Shensheng NiChunyu LiYicheng YuDongze NiuJie ZhuDongmin YinChongqing WangWenfan ZhangXingmei JiangJianjun RenPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
Erythromycin is one of the most commonly used macrolide antibiotics. However, its pollution of the ecosystem is a significant risk to human health worldwide. Currently, there are no effective and environmentally friendly methods to resolve this issue. Although erythromycin esterase B (EreB) specifically degrades erythromycin, its non-recyclability and fragility limit the large-scale application of this enzyme. In this work, palygorskite was selected as a carrier for enzyme immobilization. The enzyme was attached to palygorskite via a crosslinking reaction to construct an effective erythromycin-degradation material (i.e., EreB@modified palygorskite), which was characterized using FT-IR, SEM, XRD, and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller techniques. The results suggested the successful modification of the material and the loading of the enzyme. The immobilized enzyme had a higher stability over varying temperatures (25-65 °C) and pH values (6.5-10.0) than the free enzyme, and the maximum rate of reaction (V max ) and the turnover number (k cat ) of the enzyme increased to 0.01 mM min -1 and 169 min -1 , respectively, according to the enzyme-kinetics measurements. The EreB@modified palygorskite maintained about 45% of its activity after 10 cycles, and degraded erythromycin in polluted water to 20 mg L -1 within 300 min. These results indicate that EreB could serve as an effective immobilizing carrier for erythromycin degradation at the industrial scale.