posted on 2024-03-19, 07:19authored byHéctor Sánchez-Morán, Joel L. Kaar, Daniel K. Schwartz
Recent advances have demonstrated the promise of complex
multicomponent
polymeric supports to enable supra-biological enzyme performance.
However, the discovery of such supports has been limited by time-consuming,
low-throughput synthesis and screening. Here, we describe a novel
combinatorial and high-throughput platform that enables rapid screening
of complex and heterogeneous copolymer brushes as enzyme immobilization
supports, named combinatorial high-throughput enzyme support screening
(CHESS). Using a 384-well plate format, we synthesized arrays of three-component
polymer brushes in the microwells using photoactivated surface-initiated
polymerization and immobilized enzymes in situ. The utility of CHESS
to identify optimal immobilization supports under thermally and chemically
denaturing conditions was demonstrated usingBacillus
subtilisLipase A (LipA). The identification of supports
with optimal compositions was validated by immobilizing LipA on polymer-brush-modified
biocatalyst particles. We further demonstrated that CHESS could be
used to predict the optimal composition of polymer brushes a priori for the previously unexplored enzyme, alkaline
phosphatase (AlkP). Our findings demonstrate that CHESS represents
a predictable and reliable platform for dramatically accelerating
the search of chemical compositions for immobilization supports and
further facilitates the discovery of biocompatible and stabilizing
materials.