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Modulating the Biofunctionality of Metal-Organic-Framework-Encapsulated Enzymes through Controllable Embedding Patterns.

Guosheng ChenXiaoxue KouSiming HuangLinjing TongYujian ShenWangshu ZhuFang ZhuGangfeng Ouyang
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Embedding an enzyme within a MOF as exoskeleton (enzyme@MOF) offers new opportunities to improve the inherent fragile nature of the enzyme, but also to impart novel biofunctionality to the MOF. Despite the remarkable stability achieved for MOF-embedded enzymes, embedding patterns and conversion of the enzymatic biofunctionality after entrapment by a MOF have only received limited attention. Herein, we reveal how embedding patterns affect the bioactivity of an enzyme encapsulated in ZIF-8. The enzyme@MOF can maintain high activity when the encapsulation process is driven by rapid enzyme-triggered nucleation of ZIF-8. When the encapsulation is driven by slow coprecipitation and the enzymes are not involved in the nucleation of ZIF-8, enzyme@MOF tends to be inactive owing to unfolding and competing coordination caused by the ligand, 2-methyl imidazole. These two embedding patterns can easily be controlled by chemical modification of the amino acids of the enzymes, modulating their biofunctionality.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • gene expression
  • amino acid
  • genome wide