| Literature DB >> 28356784 |
Tomasz Marek Goszczyński1, Maciej Gawłowski1, Beata Girek2, Konrad Kowalski1, Janusz Boratyński1,2, Tomasz Girek2.
Abstract
Recently a great interest in the field of protein engineering and the design of innovative drug delivery systems employing specific ligands such as cyclodextrins is observed. The paper reports the solid state, thermal method for protein coupling with β-cyclodextrin and the physicochemical and biological properties of the obtained conjugates. The structure of the obtained conjugates was investigated via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, dynamic light scattering and circular dichroism analysis. The presented conjugates were biologically active and covalently bound β-cyclodextrin preserved the ability to form inclusion complexes with the model compound. This report demonstrates the great potential of cyclodextrin as a modifying unit that can be used to modulate the properties of therapeutic proteins, additionally giving such conjugates the possibility to transport many therapeutic substances in the form of inclusion complexes. In addition, the paper presents the potential of protein-cyclodextrin conjugates to construct innovative bioactive molecules for biological and medical applications.Entities:
Keywords: Conjugates; Cyclodextrin; Inclusion complex; Protein; Thermal reaction in solid state
Year: 2017 PMID: 28356784 PMCID: PMC5350216 DOI: 10.1007/s10847-017-0706-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Incl Phenom Macrocycl Chem ISSN: 1388-3127 Impact factor: 1.633
Scheme 1Synthesis of β-CD/lysozyme conjugate
Molecular mass differences between lysozyme(c), lysozyme(t) and L-CD conjugates (ESI-MS)
| Protein/conjugate | Mprotein/conjugate (Da) calcd/found | ΔMprotein versus conjugate (Da) calcd/found |
|---|---|---|
| Lysozyme(c) | 14304.98/14305.24 | – |
| Lysozyme(t) | 14304.98/14305.67 | – |
| L-CD conjugates | 15419.32/15419.48 | 1114.34/1114.23 |
Fig. 1Characterization of lysozyme and L-CD conjugates using the dynamic light scattering technique. Size distributions are shown according to intensity. dH—hydrodynamic diameter (nm). Samples (c = 0.2 mM) were prepared in phosphate buffer (64 mM, containing 10% w/w glycerol, pH 7.2)
Fig. 2Relative hydrodynamic diameter d H/d H 0 where d H 0 is the hydrodynamic diameter of lysozyme and L-CD conjugates at 20 °C determined by the DLS method as a function of temperature. Samples (c = 0.2 mM) were prepared in phosphate buffer (64 mM, containing 10% w/w glycerol, pH 7.2)
Fig. 3Far and near (inset) UV circular dichroism spectra of lysozyme and L-CD conjugates. Samples were prepared in phosphate buffer (64 mM, containing 10% w/w of glycerol, pH 7.2). Lysozyme and L-CD conjugates concentrations were in the range 6–8 μM and 60–80 μM for measurements in far and near ultraviolet, respectively
Fig. 4Biological activity of control lysozyme (lysozyme (c)), thermal treated lysozyme (lysozyme (t)) and L-CD conjugates. Enzymatic activity was determined using. Micrococcus lysodeikticus (Sigma–Aldrich, ATCC No. 5698, LOT No.:111M8601V) according to the standard procedure [24]
Changes in the spectral behavior of CV (λ1 = 559 nm and λ2 = 596 nm) under the addition of lysozyme, β-cyclodextrin and L-CD conjugates
| Mixture, concentration (µM) | λ1 (nm) | λ1 (nm) |
|---|---|---|
| CV (10 µM) | 596.5 | 559.5 |
| CV (10 µM) + Lysozyme (140 µM) | 596.7 | 559.9 |
| CV (10 µM) + β-CD (140 µM) | 598.9 | 561.4 |
| CV (10 µM) + L-β-CD conjugate (140 µM) | 597.2 | 560.8 |
The absorption spectra have been resolved in the sum of their Gaussian constituents. Samples were prepared in phosphate buffer (64 mM, containing 10% w/w glycerol, pH 7.2)