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Kinetics of Enzyme Attack on Substrates Covalently Attached to Solid Surfaces: Influence of Spacer Chain Length, Immobilized Substrate Surface Concentration and Surface Charge
Author(s) -
Joseph Deere,
Rui F. De Oliveira,
Bartłomiej Tomaszewski,
Sarah Millar,
Antonia Lalaouni,
Laura F. Solares,
Sabine L. Flitsch,
Peter J. Halling
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
langmuir
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.042
H-Index - 333
eISSN - 1520-5827
pISSN - 0743-7463
DOI - 10.1021/la801932f
Subject(s) - covalent bond , chemistry , substrate (aquarium) , immobilized enzyme , aqueous solution , kinetics , reaction rate , stereochemistry , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , enzyme , catalysis , oceanography , physics , quantum mechanics , geology
The use of alpha-chymotrypsin to cleave covalently bound N-acetyl- l-tryptophan (Ac-Trp-OH) from the surfaces of aminopropylated controlled pore glass (CPG) and the polymer PEGA 1,900 was investigated. Oligoglycine spacer chains were used to present the covalently attached Ac-Trp-OH substrate to the aqueous enzyme. In the absence of the oligoglycine spacer chain, the rate of release was relatively slow, especially from the PEGA 1,900. These slow rates reflect the position of the amino group to which Ac-Trp-OH is covalently attached. On the glass there was a clear optimum with a chain of four glycine residues. For PEGA 1,900 there is no real apparent change beyond two glycine residues. The decline in rate beyond these optima are a possible result of changes in oligoglycine structure. Comparing different surface loadings of bound substrate the rate of release of Ac-Trp-OH from CPG with a pore diameter of 1,200 A was optimal when using 83% of the maximum that can be coupled, then fell again at higher loading. The rate of Ac-Trp-OH release from CPG was the same for surface coverages of 0.4 and 1.0. The introduction of permanent surface charges on CPG 1,200 exhibits a distinct influence on enzymatic cleavage with an increase in the rate of biocatalysis at the surface. Optimal presentation of covalently immobilized substrate on different supports by use of appropriate linkers leads to favorable biocatalysis from the support.

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