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Paper

Analyst, 2009, 134, 851 - 859, DOI: 10.1039/b815590a


Enzymatic activity of surface-immobilized horseradish peroxidase confined to micrometer- to nanometer-scale structures in nanocapillary array membranes

Zhen Wang, Travis L. King, Sean P. Branagan and Paul W. Bohn


Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was immobilized on the planar surfaces and inside the cylindrical nanopores of nanocapillary array membranes (NCAMs) to study how the enzyme-catalyzed oxidation of a fluorigenic substrate, Amplex Red (AR), to fluorescent resorufin by hydrogen peroxide is influenced by confinement. Because AR was also found to be converted to resorufin photolytically at high laser fluences, a modified laser-induced fluorescence protocol was developed to characterize the enzyme-catalyzed reaction in the absence of interference from the photolytic reaction. Surface-immobilized HRP was studied in two environments: bound to the surface of a microfluidic channel, and bound to the interior of cylindrical nanopores in NCAMs connecting crossed microfluidic channels. HRP was immobilized through reaction of solvent-accessible primary amines with the epoxy group of the methyl methacrylate–glycidyl methacrylate copolymer synthesized in either planar or annular geometries to construct the test structures for enzymatic activity. HRP immobilized on planar surfaces shows high activity (10 µM min-1) meaning that the copolymer membrane exhibits good potential for immobilizing the enzyme, especially since active structures are obtained in a one-step reaction. HRP was also immobilized inside nanopores via physisorption. Enzymatic reactions inside the nanopores were characterized and compared to finite element simulations of a modified Eley–Rideal mechanism to bracket the value of the overall rate constant for the confined enzyme. Reaction velocities were estimated to be 10-fold higher in the nanopores than for the same enzyme bound to a planar microfluidic surface.

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