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Confined Multiple Enzymatic (Cascade) Reactions within Poly(dopamine)-based Capsosomes

Year: 2014

Journal: ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2014, 6 (15), pp 12771–12779, 20141006

Authors: Leticia Hosta-Rigau †, Maria J. York-Duran †, Yan Zhang †, Kenneth N. Goldie ‡, and Brigitte Städler †

Last authors: Brigitte Städler

Organizations: † Interdisciplinay nanoscience center (iNANO), Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark ‡ Center for Cellular Imaging & Nano Analytics, Biozentrum, University of Basel, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland

Country: Denmark, Switzerland

The design of compartmentalized carriers as artificial cells is envisioned to be an efficient tool with potential applications in the biomedical field. The advent of this area has witnessed the assembly of functional, bioinspired systems attempting to tackle challenges in cell mimicry by encapsulating multiple compartments and performing controlled encapsulated enzymatic catalysis. Although capsosomes, which consist of liposomes embedded within a polymeric carrier capsule, are among the most advanced systems, they are still amazingly simple in their functionality and cumbersome in their assembly. We report on capsosomes by embedding liposomes within a poly(dopamine) (PDA) carrier shell created in a solution-based single-step procedure. We demonstrate for the first time the potential of PDA-based capsosomes to act as artificial cell mimics by performing a two-enzyme coupled reaction in parallel with a single-enzyme conversion by encapsulating three different enzymes into separated liposomal compartments. In the former case, the enzyme uricase converts uric acid into hydrogen peroxide, CO2 and allantoin, followed by the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with the reagent Amplex Ultra Red in the presence of the enzyme horseradish peroxidase to generate the fluorescent product resorufin. The parallel enzymatic catalysis employs the enzyme ascorbate oxidase to convert ascorbic acid into 2-L-dehydroascorbic acid.