Molecular Crowding and a Minimal Footprint at a Gold Nanoparticle Support Stabilize Glucose Oxidase and Boost Its Activity
Journal article, 2020

Enzymes conjugated to nanomaterials are used in the design of various biotechnologies. In the development of biosensors, surface modifications with the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx) serve to aid the detection of blood glucose. In order to optimize sensor effectiveness, the enzyme tertiary structure needs to be preserved upon immobilization to retain the enzyme's catalytic activity. Because of the nature of GOx, it suffers from a tendency to denature when immobilized at a solid surface; hence, methods to optimize enzyme stability are of great importance. Here, we introduce the study of the interaction of GOx to the highly curved surface of 20 nm gold nanoparticles (AuNP) with an absorbed monolayer coating of enzyme as determined by flocculation assays and quantification of immobilized GOx at the nanoparticle surface. Enzyme crowding was determined by comparing the number of enzymes that bind to how many can physically fit. These measurements show how placing a monolayer of enzyme where the enzyme spreads thin at the AuNP surface still provides stable catalytic performance of up to 14 days compared to enzymes free in solution. Moreover, by the increasing enzyme density via increasing the amount of GOx present in solution during the GOx/AuNP conjugation step creates a molecularly crowded environment at the highly curved nanoparticle surface. This limits the size of the enzyme footprint for attachment and shows that the activity per enzyme can be enhanced up to 300%. This is of great importance for implementing stable and sensitive sensor technologies that are constructed by enzyme-based nanoparticle scaffolds. Here, we show by using the conditions that maintain GOx structure and function when limiting the enzyme coating to an ultrathin layer, the design and construction of an ultrafast responding diagnostic sensor technology for glucose can be achieved, which is crucial for monitoring rapid fluctuations of, for instance, glucose in the brain.

Author

Yuanmo Wang

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Rima Jonkuté

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Hampus Lindmark

Jacqueline Keighron

New York Institute of Technology

Ann-Sofie Cans

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Langmuir

07437463 (ISSN) 15205827 (eISSN)

Vol. 36 1 37-46

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Analytical Chemistry

Other Chemistry Topics

DOI

10.1021/acs.langmuir.9b02863

PubMed

31865701

More information

Latest update

3/4/2020 4