Issue 18, 2023

Nanobiocatalysts with inbuilt cofactor recycling for oxidoreductase catalysis in organic solvents

Abstract

The major stumbling block in the implementation of oxidoreductase enzymes in continuous processes is their stark dependence on costly cofactors that are insoluble in organic solvents. We describe a chemical strategy that allows producing nanobiocatalysts, based on an oxidoreductase enzyme, that performs biocatalytic reactions in hydrophobic organic solvents without external cofactors. The chemical design relies on the use of a silica-based carrier nanoparticle, of which the porosity can be exploited to create an aqueous reservoir containing the cofactor. The nanoparticle core, possessing radial-centred pore channels, serves as a cofactor reservoir. It is further covered with a layer of reduced porosity. This layer serves as a support for the immobilisation of the selected enzyme yet allowing the diffusion of the cofactor from the nanoparticle core. The immobilised enzyme is, in turn, shielded by an organosilica layer of controlled thickness fully covering the enzyme. Such produced nanobiocatalysts are shown to catalyse the reduction of a series of relevant ketones into the corresponding secondary alcohols, also in a continuous flow fashion.

Graphical abstract: Nanobiocatalysts with inbuilt cofactor recycling for oxidoreductase catalysis in organic solvents

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Jun 2023
Accepted
15 Aug 2023
First published
01 Sep 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale Adv., 2023,5, 5036-5044

Nanobiocatalysts with inbuilt cofactor recycling for oxidoreductase catalysis in organic solvents

J. Sahlin, C. Wu, A. Buscemi, C. Schärer, S. A. Nazemi, R. S. K., N. Herrera-Reinoza, T. A. Jung and P. Shahgaldian, Nanoscale Adv., 2023, 5, 5036 DOI: 10.1039/D3NA00413A

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