Single amino acid bionanozyme for environmental remediation

Abstract

Enzymes are extremely complex catalytic structures with immense biological and technological importance. Nevertheless, their widespread environmental implementation faces several challenges, including high production costs, low operational stability, and intricate recovery and reusability. Therefore, the de novo design of minimalistic biomolecular nanomaterials that can efficiently mimic the biocatalytic function (bionanozymes) and overcome the limitations of natural enzymes is a critical goal in biomolecular engineering. Here, we report an exceptionally simple yet highly active and robust single amino acid bionanozyme that can catalyze the rapid oxidation of environmentally toxic phenolic contaminates and serves as an ultrasensitive tool to detect biologically important neurotransmitters similar to the laccase enzyme. While inspired by the laccase catalytic site, the substantially simpler copper-coordinated bionanozyme is ∼5400 times more cost-effective, four orders more efficient, and 36 times more sensitive compared to the natural protein. Furthermore, the designed mimic is stable under extreme conditions (pH, ionic strength, temperature, storage time), markedly reusable for several cycles, and displays broad substrate specificity. These findings hold great promise in developing efficient bionanozymes for analytical chemistry, environmental protection, and biotechnology.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Mar 21, 2022
Source ID
10.1038/s41467-022-28942-0

Entities

People

  • Bryan M. Wong
  • Ehud Gazit
  • Linda Shimon
  • Pandeeswar Makam
  • Sharma S R K C Yamijala
  • Venkata S. Bhadram

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate
  • National Science Foundation
  • Science and Engineering Research Board

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Distributed Systems and Data Platform Development
  • Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry
  • Systems Analysis and Design

Technology Areas

  • Biotechnology