| Literature DB >> 35572403 |
Muhammad Bilal1, Hafiz M N Iqbal2, Syed Farooq Adil3, Mohammed Rafi Shaik3, Abdelatty Abdelgawad4, Mohammad Rafe Hatshan3, Mujeeb Khan3.
Abstract
Background: Enzymes based bio-catalysis has wide range of applications in various chemical and biological processes. Thus, the process of enzymes immobilization on suitable support to obtain highly active and stable bio-catalysts has great potential in industrial applications. Particularly, surface-modified magnetic nanomaterials have garnered a special interest as versatile platforms for biomolecules/enzyme immobilization. Aim of review: This review spotlights recent progress in the immobilization of various enzymes onto surface-coated multifunctional magnetic nanostructured materials and their derived nano-constructs for multiple applications. Conclusive remarks, technical challenges, and insightful opinions on this field of research which are helpful to expand the application prospects of these materials are also given with suitable examples. Key scientific concepts of review: Nanostructured materials, including surface-coated magnetic nanoparticles have recently gained immense significance as suitable support materials for enzyme immobilization, due to their large surface area, unique functionalities, and high chemical and mechanical stability. Besides, magnetic nanoparticles are less expensive and offers great potential in industrial applications due to their easy recovery and separation form their enzyme conjugates with an external magnetic field. Magnetic nanoparticles based biocatalytic systems offer a wide-working temperature, pH range, increased storage and thermal stabilities. So far, several studies have documented the application of a variety of surface modification and functionalization techniques to circumvent the aggregation and oxidation of magnetic nanoparticles. Surface engineering of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) helps to improve the dispersion stability, enhance mechanical and physicochemical properties, upgrade the surface activity and also increases enzyme immobilization capabilities and biocompatibility of the materials. However, several challenges still need to be addressed, such as controlled synthesis of MNPs and clinical aspects of these materials require consistent research from multidisciplinary scientists to realize its practical applications.Entities:
Keywords: Bio-catalysis; Engineered nano-matrices; Enzyme immobilization; Nanomaterials; Surface functionalization
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35572403 PMCID: PMC9091734 DOI: 10.1016/j.jare.2021.09.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adv Res ISSN: 2090-1224 Impact factor: 12.822
Synthesis methods for magnetic nanoparticles.
| Name of synthesis method | Merits | Demerits |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical co-precipitation | Simple and efficient | poor crystallinity, size distribution, and aggregation Not appropriate to prepare highly pure, accurate stoichiometric phase |
| Microemulsion | Good homogeneous nature Precise control of particle size | time laborious, requirement of large amounts of solvent and poor yield |
| Hydrothermal reactions | Easy to control particle Shape and size | High pressure, prolonged reaction duration and high reaction temperature |
| Thermal decomposition | High yield and good control of size and shapes | Elevated reaction temperature |
| Sol-gel reactions | Good control of size and structure | Prolonged reaction time and cost expensive |
| Electrochemical method | Easy control of size | Reproducibility |
| Vapor phase method | Greater yield | High temperatures |
| Bio-based method | Nontoxic, cost effective, cheap materials and solvents, environmentally friendly, and synthesis at room temperature and atmosphere | Scale up limitations, Reproducibility, tedious purification, and poor understanding of the explicit mechanism. |
Fig. 1Surface functionalization strategies of MNPs to improve their properties for enzyme immobilization.
Fig. 2Typical morphologies of magnetic composite nanomaterials. Reprinted from Ref. [26] with permission under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license. IONPs—iron oxide nanoparticles.
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the synthesis of 1,3,5-triazine-functionalized PEG-coated Fe3O4 nanoparticles and immobilization of pectinase. Reprinted from Ref. [65] with permission from Elsevier. License Number: 5092320806715.
Fig. 4The diagram of the lipase-GO-MNPs-CLEAs assembly process. Reprinted from Ref. [82] with permission from Elsevier. License Number: 5092320991917. CLEAs-cross-linked enzyme aggregates.
Fig. 5The illustration of modification and immobilization process on magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles for efficient BSA digestion. Reprinted from Ref. [94] with permission from Elsevier. License Number: 5092321139781.
Fig. 6The chemical structure of pH-catalyzed oxidation of pyrogallol groups of tannin and subsequent binding reactions with the amines on trypsin. Reprinted from Ref. [94] with permission from Elsevier. License Number: 5092321139781.
Fig. 7Schematic diagram of Co2+-chelated MNP preparation for use in reversible immobilization of lipase. Reprinted from Ref. [102] with permission from Elsevier. License Number: 5092321359009.
Some examples of surface-coated magnetic nanoparticles as support materials for enzyme immobilization and their applications.
| Magnetic nanocarrier | Enzyme | Functional reagent | Improved properties | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MNPs | Co2+ | Immobilized lipase possessed 95% conversion efficiency to synthesize biodiesel from waste cooking oil. | Biodiesel production | ||
| Fe3O4-NH2@MIL-101(Cr) | Laccase from white rot fungi | MIL-101 | High recovered activity, and better endurance to low pH and elevated temperature regimes. | Removal of phenolic compounds | |
| Agarose-coupled novel MNPs | Co2+ | Immobilized bioconjugate displayed high operational and thermal stability, and preserved over 90% of its preliminary activity after repeatedly using for 15 runs. | Production of aromatic compounds | ||
| MNPs-functionalized graphene oxide composites | Lipase B from | Hyaluronic acid | As compared to the free enzyme, the storage stability of lipase-GO-MNPs was substantially improved. | Biodiesel production, pharmaceuticals and cosmetic industry | |
| MNPs | Porcine pancreatic lipase and penicillin G acylase | Cellulose | Improved catalytic activity and stability of immobilized enzymes. | Enzyme immobilization | |
| MNPs | Tannic acid | Immobilized β-agarase, exhibited greater pH and thermal resistance as well as appreciable recycling ability compared with the free counterpart. | Preparation of bioactive neoagaro-oligosaccharide | ||
| Trichlorotriazine-functionalized MNPs | Pectinase | Polyethylene glycol | Immobilized enzyme presented improved satisfactory operational stability, improved catalytic efficiency, and easily recyclability in multiple cycles. | Fruit juice clarification | |
| Fe3O4@MIL-100(Fe) | MIL-100(Fe) | Immobilized nanobiocatalytic system retained more than 65% of its original activity at 65 °C for the hydrolysis of olive oil in 6 h. | Transesterification and synthesis of esters | ||
| MNPs | Cholesterol oxidase | Silica | In contrast to the soluble enzyme, the covalent immobilization of biocatalyst was able to retain about 50% of its activity. | Development of biosensing components | |
| MNPs | Glucose oxidase | Silica | Immobilized bioconjugate preparation maintained over 95% and 90% of its original activity after storage for 45 days, and 12 consecutive reaction cycles. | Biomedical applications | |
| MNPs | Phospholipase D | Silica | Increased tolerance of immobilized enzyme to high temperature. Catalytic activity of the immobilized biocatalyst retained to be 40% after eight recycles. | Synthesis of | |
| MNPs film | Horseradish peroxidase | Polymethyl methacrylate | Excellent reusability retaining 78.5% of its initial activity after 10 repeated cycles. | Removal of wastewater aromatic pollutants | |
| Fe3O4–graphene nanocomposite | APTES | Stability and activity of the immobilized nanobiocatalyst was markedly increased than that to free laccase. | Green preparation of sulfa drugs | ||
| Biomimetic silica-MNPs hybrid nanocomposite | silica | Superior storage, thermal, and operational stability of the enzyme immobilized in the composite material. | Pharmaceutical and food industry | ||
| Fe3O4/Ni-BTC | S-adenosylmethionine synthetase from | Citric acid | Iimmobilized enzyme was more stable against temperature variation (by nearly 8-fold in an | Biosynthesis of S-adenosylmethionine | |
| Amino-functionalized | Alkaline protease from | APTES | Excellent operational stability retaining 50.1% of its initial activity after 10 cycles. | Preparation of oat | |
| Ni2+-functionalized MNPs | Prolidase from | Silica | Improved activity at elevated temperature of 70 °C and a wider pH range of 5.5 to 10 than that to free counter form. | Hydrolysis of organophosphorus compounds | |
| MNPs | Alkyl silane | Increased catalytic activities of lipases after immobilization. | Enzyme immobilization | ||
| NPs | Horseradish peroxidase | Carbon | Enzyme-based novel amperometric electrode | H2O2 sensing | |
| MNPs | Lipase from | Polydopamine | A broader pH and temperature adaptability as compared to the free enzyme. | Biodiesel production, organic synthesis, and environmental protection | |
| MNPs | Cellulase from | – | Immobilized enzyme retained 56.87% of its maximal activity after 6 h of incubation at 60 °C. | Enzymatic saccharification of rice straw | |
| Magnetic carbon nanotubes | Glucoamylase from | Poly(amidoamine) | superior stability and reusability, without compromising the | Starch | |
| Metallic nanomagnets | α-chymotrypsin, lipase B, and | Carbon | Immobilized bioconjugate preparations showed good stability and catalytic performance and could be recyclable from milliliter to liter volumes in short recycling durations. | Analytical immunoprecipitation and cell separation | |
| MNPs with long alkyl chains | poly- | Nanoimmobilized biocatalytic system with the longest alkyl chains presented superior tolerance to high temperature (ranging from 25 to 70 °C) than that to the free form of lipase. | Biodiesel production, food processing , cosmetic and pharmaceutical industry | ||
| Divinyl | Lipase from | Polyethyleneimine | Good enantioselectivities with high catalytic activities in the reaction medium at pH 7.0. | Biodiesel production, food processing , cosmetic and pharmaceutical industry | |
| Superparamagnetic nanoparticles (Fe3O4) | Lipase from | Polyethylenimine, APTES, and Glutaraldehyde | The SPMN (superparamagnetic nanoparticle) @APTES covalent preparation had around 450 min of half-life time at pH 7.0 and 70 °C while that of the free enzyme was 46 min. | Recovery of the biocatalyst | |
| MNPs | Alcohol dehydrogenase | Carboxymethyl dextran | In contrast to the free form of ADH that dropped 70% of its original activity at 20 °C, and complete loss of its activity at 40 °C after 24 h. | Chemical industries | |
| Fe3O4/SiO2/NH2 | L-asparaginase | APTES, and Glutaraldehyde | ASNases were more stable in a wide range of pH and temperature values under the optimum reaction conditions. | Anti-leukemia chemotherapy | |
| Fe3O4/SiO2/COOH | L-asparaginase | APTES, and Glutaraldehyde | High stability in a wide range of pH and temperature values. | Anti-leukemia chemotherapy | |
| Magnetic graphene nanocomposite | Chitosan | With regard to the soluble enzyme, the nanobiocatalytic system showed highly enhanced bioactivity and retained over 75% of its actual activity. | Saccharification of microcrystalline cellulose | ||
| Sebacoyl-modified MNPs | Lipase B from | Chitosan | High activity up to 10 repeated catalytic cycles under the optimized conditions (n-hexane, vinyl acetate, 45 °C). | Enzymatic | |
| MNPs | Chitin, chitosan, and sodium alginate | Marked reusability of the nanobiocatalytic system in several successive batches for GOS synthesis without a substantial loss of enzyme activity. | Galacto-oligosaccharide production | ||
| Iron oxide magnetic nanocomposite | Manganese peroxidase from | Chitosan | The nanobioconjugate preparation retained its activity and demonstrated recycling ability in 5 consecutive reaction cycles. | Decolorization of textile wastewater | |
| Fe3O4@SiO2_EDTA-TMS | Laccase | EDTA-Cu (II) | Good operational stability of the immobilized enzyme presenting 73% of its initial activity after five sequential reactive cycles. Successfully applied to the degradation of Indigo | Biocatalysis and biosensors | |
| MNPs | Tyrosine | Tannic acid | Enzymatic digestion of bovine serum albumin | Protein digestion | |
| MNPs | Tyrosine | Gallic acid | Immobilized trypsin presented high stability and retained high enzyme relative activity in alkaline pH conditions (pH range of 6 to 10.5) and a temperature range of 45 to 55 °C. | Diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, food, and waste treatments | |
| MNPs | Gallic acid | Improved esterification activity. | Production of multicycle ethyl isovalerate | ||
| Fe3O4@silica | Catalase from bovine liver | TMOS, APTES | Enhanced recycling efficiency and high resistance to heat, proteolytic agent, and denaturants. | Enzyme shielding | |
| Fe3+-TA@ | Catalase from bovine liver | TMOS, APTES | Improved stability and efficient recycling ability | Shielding effect to protect | |
| Fe3O4@mSiO2 | Nitrile hydratase | Glutaraldehyde | Improved pH, thermal, mechanical and storage | Catalysis production of | |
| CA-Fe3O4 NPs | Lipase | Citric acid | Excellent long-term storage stability and increased activity at high temperature and pH | Enzyme immobilization |
MNPs—Magnetic nanoparticles; TMOS— Tetramethyl orthosilicate.