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Construction of Metal–Organic Framework-Based Heterogeneous Pepsin and Its Degradation Performance and Mechanism for Phthalic Acid Esters

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Shengnan Hu, Hanzhu Kong, Yuting Sun, Ronghui Wu, Jing Xu, Ming Guo

Summary

Researchers constructed a metal-organic framework-based heterogeneous pepsin enzyme system and evaluated its degradation of plastic-associated protein contaminants, demonstrating enhanced catalytic stability and activity compared to free enzyme.

Biological enzyme-driven degradation of environmental pollutants has attracted widespread attention because it is ecofriendly and highly efficient. Immobilized enzyme technology has emerged as a promising technique in enzymology that addresses the limitations associated with free enzymes. Traditional solid-loaded enzyme substrates are often affected by blockages and restricted substrate accessibility. In this study, we synthesized an efficient heterogeneous pepsin catalyst, named PEP@M-MIL100(Fe), by covalently combining carboxylated ferrite structural expanded metal-organic frameworks with pepsin. This catalyst demonstrated excellent environmental adaptability and remarkable catalytic degradation capabilities. Notably, it rapidly degraded the persistent microplastic pollutant diisononyl phthalate (DINP) within just 150 min, with a removal efficiency of up to 95.88%. Impressively, even after 10 consecutive uses, the catalyst maintained its high performance. We proposed an innovative steady-state heterogeneous enzyme-catalyzed degradation mechanism, i.e., diffusion (D)-absorption (A)-binding (B)-reaction (R)-degradation (D)-link mechanism, which emphasizes the influence of substrate diffusion rates in this process. This work presents the first successful application of pepsin to DINP degradation and offers a sustainable and effective approach for addressing contemporary pollution challenges.

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