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Matter‐<i>tag</i>: A universal immobilization platform for enzymes on polymers, metals, and silicon‐based materials

Biotechnology and Bioengineering 2019 63 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ulrich Schwaneberg Sarah Dedisch, Sarah Dedisch, Annika Wiens, Annika Wiens, Felix Jakob, Mehdi D. Davari, Dominik Söder, Ulrich Schwaneberg César Rodriguez‐Emmenegger, Felix Jakob, Ulrich Schwaneberg Felix Jakob, Felix Jakob, Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg Ulrich Schwaneberg

Summary

Researchers developed adhesion-promoting peptides called Matter-tags that anchor enzymes to solid surfaces in a stable, oriented way. These enzyme immobilization tools have potential applications for breaking down plastic-associated chemicals and for biosensor technologies used in microplastic detection.

Enzyme immobilization is extensively studied to improve enzyme properties in catalysis and analytical applications. Here, we introduce a simple and versatile enzyme immobilization platform based on adhesion-promoting peptides, namely Matter-tags. Matter-tags immobilize enzymes in an oriented way as a dense monolayer. The immobilization platform was established with three adhesion-promoting peptides; Cecropin A (CecA), liquid chromatography peak I (LCI), and Tachystatin A2 (TA2), that were genetically fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein and to two industrially important enzymes: a phytase (from Yersinia mollaretii) and a cellulase (CelA2 from a metagenomic library). Here, we report a universal and simple Matter-tag-based immobilization platform for enzymes on various materials including polymers (polystyrene, polypropylene, and polyethylene terephthalate), metals (stainless steel and gold), and silicon-based materials (silicon wafer). The Matter-tag-based enzyme immobilization is performed at ambient temperature within minutes (<10 min) in an aqueous solution harboring the phytase or cellulase by immersing the targeted material. The peptide LCI was identified as universal adhesion promoter; LCI immobilized both enzymes on all investigated materials. The attachment of phytase-LCI onto gold was characterized with surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy obtaining a dissociation constant value (K<sub>D</sub> ) of 2.9·10<sup>-8</sup> M and a maximal surface coverage of 504 ng/cm².

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