Issue 45, 2021

Biomedical applications of metal–organic framework (MOF)-based nano-enzymes

Abstract

Natural enzymes are highly specific biocatalysts that can selectively catalyse specific biological reactions. However, the high preparation cost and easy deactivation of natural enzymes limit their practical applications. In the past ten years, nano-enzymes have been developed rapidly because of their excellent physical and chemical properties, low cost, high stability and easy storage, and can be used as a bridge to natural enzymes. These are a class of enzyme-like nanomaterials, which have some similarities with natural enzymes in terms of their total size, shape and surface charge. They themselves can simulate the bionic catalytic function of enzymes through the catalytic activity of inorganic materials. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) and their derivatives are expected to be substitutes for conventional enzymes in enzymatic reactions, and nano-enzymes have shown potential in the field of biomedicine, such as in antimicrobial drugs, biological detection and cancer treatment. In this review, the various types of MOF-derived nano-enzymes and the activities of corresponding simulated enzymes are summarized, and the latest applications of MOF-derived nano-enzymes in biosensing, as antibacterial compounds and in cancer treatment are mainly introduced. In addition, the development prospects of nano-enzymes is introduced in order to provide new ideas for the design and applications of nano-enzymes in the future.

Graphical abstract: Biomedical applications of metal–organic framework (MOF)-based nano-enzymes

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
24 ago 2021
Accepted
21 out 2021
First published
21 out 2021

New J. Chem., 2021,45, 20987-21000

Biomedical applications of metal–organic framework (MOF)-based nano-enzymes

Y. Qiu, G. Tan, Y. Fang, S. Liu, Y. Zhou, A. Kumar, M. Trivedi, D. Liu and J. Liu, New J. Chem., 2021, 45, 20987 DOI: 10.1039/D1NJ04045F

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