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  2. Tweezing-adsorptive bubble separation. Analytical method for the selective and high enrichment of metalloenzymes

Tweezing-adsorptive bubble separation. Analytical method for the selective and high enrichment of metalloenzymes

  • Anal Chem. 2005 Oct 1;77(19):6113-7. doi: 10.1021/ac050977s.
Birte M Gerken 1 Carsten Wattenbach Diana Linke Holger Zorn Ralf G Berger Harun Parlar
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemical-Technical Analysis and Chemical Food Technology, Research Center Weihenstephan for Brewing and Food Quality, Technical University of Munich, Weihenstephaner Steig 23, D-85354 Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany.
Abstract

A novelly developed tweezing-adsorptive bubble separation (ABS) method for the enrichment of metalloenzymes (laccase C and horseradish peroxidase) is introduced. The method is based on the chelation of the enzymes' active center and can also be applied for analysis. N-(2-acetamido)iminodiacetic acid served as a chelator and was synthesized with an octyl unit to become ADA-C8. Laccase was enriched 13.3-fold (66.31% recovery) and HPOX 17.8-fold (85.34%) without a significant loss of enzymatic activity. To prove that the entire Enzyme is tweezed at the active center, ABS trials were done using ADA-C8 already complexed with Cu2+ and Fe3+. As only marginal enrichment occurred (ER laccase, 0.17; ER HPOX, 0.44), no chelating effect was concluded. It was determined how the chelation toward the active center was directed by applying Other chelators such as EDTA, NTA, N,N-dimethylaminoglycine, oxalic acid, malonic acid, adipinic acid, and tripropylamine, which are similar in structure to ADA-C8. The results concluded that the chelation is 3-fold coordinated on the type 1 copper center of laccase, whereas that of HPOX only 1-fold at Fe3+ and additionally at the cationic amino acid arginine, which is also located at the active center. Tweezing-ABS has been proven to selectively and effectively enrich metalloenzymes.

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