Issue 105, 2014

Self-assembly amphipathic peptides induce active enzyme aggregation that dramatically increases the operational stability of nitrilase

Abstract

Oligomeric nitrilase was fused with an amphipathic self-assembly peptide 18A at the C-terminus and expressed in Escherichia coli. The fusion enzyme spontaneously assembled into active aggregates with >90% native nitrilase activity. Much higher specific activities than the native nitrilase (Nit) were recorded for the fusion nitrilase (Nit-SEA) at higher temperatures. The enzyme aggregates were purified through cell lysis and centrifugation led to the facile preparation of immobilized particles (Nit-iSEA). Approximately 86% of the initial nitrilase activity was incorporated into the Ca-alginate entrapment beads. The thermostability of the four kinds of different nitrilase variants showed that the Nit-SEA and Nit-iSEA at 45 °C were about 6.7- and 10-fold more stable than the native nitrilase. The nitrile tolerance was also dramatically improved, no apparent substrate inhibition was observed for Nit-iSEA over the range of 30 to 120 mM mandelonitrile. Additionally, the Nit-iSEA could be recycled 20 times with ∼5% loss in activity.

Graphical abstract: Self-assembly amphipathic peptides induce active enzyme aggregation that dramatically increases the operational stability of nitrilase

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Sep 2014
Accepted
27 Oct 2014
First published
27 Oct 2014

RSC Adv., 2014,4, 60675-60684

Author version available

Self-assembly amphipathic peptides induce active enzyme aggregation that dramatically increases the operational stability of nitrilase

X. Yang, A. Huang, J. Peng, J. Wang, X. Wang, Z. Lin and S. Li, RSC Adv., 2014, 4, 60675 DOI: 10.1039/C4RA11236A

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