Issue 5, 2010

Fluorescence analysis of chemical microenvironments and their impact upon performance of immobilized enzyme

Abstract

In this work the shift in fluorescence emission spectra of acrylodan, a polar sensitive fluorophore, has been used to characterize the polarity immediately surrounding cytoplasmic (cMDH) and mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) enzyme immobilized within three-dimensional macroporous chitosan scaffolds. The scaffolds were fabricated from solutions of fluorescently tagged enzymes mixed with deacetylated and hydrophobically modified chitosan polymer. Each solution was frozen and then freeze-dried through the process of thermally induced phase separation (TIPS). The blue shift in acrylodan's emission maxima (λmax) revealed a polar shift in the chemical microenvironment surrounding the enzymes when immobilized in a modified as opposed to unmodified chitosan scaffold. These results suggest that the method of hydrophobic modification of native chitosan polymer can be used to control the amphiphilic nature of the chemical microenvironment immediately surrounding the enzyme after it has been immobilized.

Graphical abstract: Fluorescence analysis of chemical microenvironments and their impact upon performance of immobilized enzyme

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Oct 2009
Accepted
27 Jan 2010
First published
19 Feb 2010

Analyst, 2010,135, 1131-1137

Fluorescence analysis of chemical microenvironments and their impact upon performance of immobilized enzyme

G. L. Martin, C. Lau, S. D. Minteer and M. J. Cooney, Analyst, 2010, 135, 1131 DOI: 10.1039/B921409G

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