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Design and Implementation of Two-Dimensional Polymer Adsorption Models: Evaluating the Stability of Candida antarctica Lipase B/Solid-Support Interfaces by QCM-D

Year: 2013

Journal: Biomacromolecules, 2013, 14 (2), pp 377–386, 20130403

Authors: Sara V. Orski 1, Santanu Kundu 1, Richard Gross *2, and Kathryn L. Beers *1

Last authors: Kathryn L. Beers

Organizations: 1 Materials Science & Engineering Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20899, United States 2 Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing, Polytechnic Institute of NYU, Brooklyn, New York 11201, United States

Country: USA, US, United States, United States of America, America

A two-dimensional model of a solid-supported enzyme catalyst bead is fabricated on a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) sensor to measure in situ interfacial stability and mechanical properties of Candida antarctica Lipase B (CAL B) under varied conditions relating to ring-opening polymerization. The model was fabricated using a dual photochemical approach, where poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) thin films were cross-linked by a photoactive benzophenone monolayer and blended cross-linking agent. This process produces two-dimensional, homogeneous, rigid PMMA layers, which mimic commercial acrylic resins in a QCM-D experiment. Adsorption of CAL B to PMMA in QCM-D under varied buffer ionic strengths produces a viscoelastic enzyme surface that becomes more rigid as ionic strength increases. The rigid CAL B/PMMA interface demonstrates up to 20% desorption of enzyme with increasing trace water content. Increased polycaprolactone (PCL) binding at the enzyme surface was also observed, indicating greater PCL affinity for a more hydrated enzyme surface. The enzyme layer destabilized with increasing temperature, yielding near complete reversible catalyst desorption in the model.