Issue 18, 2015

Trehalose hydrogels for stabilization of enzymes to heat

Abstract

Enzymes can catalyze various reactions with high selectivity and are involved in many important biological processes. However, the general instability of enzymes against high temperature often limits their application. To address this, we synthesized a trehalose-based hydrogel in two steps from commercial starting materials with minimal purification procedures. Mono- and multi-functional trehalose monomers were cross-linked by redox-initiated radical polymerization to form a hydrogel. Phytase, an important enzyme utilized in animal feedstock, was employed to study the effectiveness of the trehalose hydrogel to stabilize proteins against heat. Addition of the phytase solution to the hydrogel resulted in enzyme internalization as confirmed by confocal microscopy. The phytase in the hydrogel retained 100% activity upon heating at 90 °C compared to 39% when the hydrogel was absent. The enzyme could also be recovered from the hydrogel. The trehalose hydrogel synthesis reported herein should be readily scalable for thermal stabilization of a wide variety of enzymes.

Graphical abstract: Trehalose hydrogels for stabilization of enzymes to heat

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Jan 2015
Accepted
24 Mar 2015
First published
07 Apr 2015

Polym. Chem., 2015,6, 3443-3448

Trehalose hydrogels for stabilization of enzymes to heat

J. Lee, J. H. Ko, E. Lin, P. Wallace, F. Ruch and H. D. Maynard, Polym. Chem., 2015, 6, 3443 DOI: 10.1039/C5PY00121H

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