Version 2 2020-07-13, 17:38Version 2 2020-07-13, 17:38
Version 1 2020-07-09, 11:33Version 1 2020-07-09, 11:33
journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-13, 17:38authored byMaria Valentina Dinu, Ionel Adrian Dinu, Sina S. Saxer, Wolfgang Meier, Uwe Pieles, Nico Bruns
Enzymes are essential biocatalysts
and very attractive as therapeutics.
However, their functionality is strictly related to their stability,
which is significantly affected by the environmental changes occurring
during their usage or long-term storage. Therefore, maintaining the
activity of enzymes is essential when they are exposed to high temperature
during usage or when they are stored for extended periods of time.
Here, we stabilize and protect enzymes by coencapsulating them with
trehalose into polymersomes. The anhydrobiotic disaccharide preserved
up to about 81% of the enzyme’s original activity when laccase/trehalose-loaded
nanoreactors were kept desiccated for 2 months at room temperature
and 75% of its activity when heated at 50 °C for 3 weeks. Moreover,
the applicability of laccase/trehalose-loaded nanoreactors as catalysts
for bleaching of the textile dyes orange G, toluidine blue O, and
indigo was proven. Our results demonstrate the advantages of coencapsulating
trehalose within polymersomes to stabilize enzymes in dehydrated state
for extended periods of time, preserving their activity even when
heated to elevated temperature.