35 research outputs found
Specificities of a chemically modified laccase from trametes hirsuta on soluble and cellulose-bound substrates
Laccases could prevent fabrics and
garments from re-deposition of dyes during
washing and finishing processes by degrading the solubilized dye. However, laccase action must be restricted to solubilized dye molecules thereby
avoiding decolorization of fabrics. Chemical
modification of enzymes can provide a powerful tool to change the adsorption behaviour of enzymes on water insoluble polymers. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) was covalently attached onto a laccase from Trametes hirsuta. Different molecular
weights of the synthetic polymer were tested
in terms of adsorption behaviour and retained
laccase activity. Covalent attachment of PEG
onto the laccase resulted in enhanced enzyme
stability while with increasing molecular weight of attached PEG the substrate affinity for the laccase conjugate decreased. The activity of the modified laccases on fibre bound dye was drastically reduced decreasing the adsorption of the enzyme on various fabrics. Compared to the 5 kDa PEG laccase conjugate (K/S value 47.60
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PEGâpeptide conjugates
The remarkable diversity of the self-assembly behavior
of PEGâpeptides is reviewed, including self-assemblies formed by PEGâpeptides with ÎČ-sheet and α-helical (coiled-coil) peptide sequences. The modes of self-assembly in solution and in the solid state are discussed. Additionally, applications in bionanotechnology and synthetic materials science are summarized
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PEGylated systems in pharmaceutics
This review addresses the use of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and PEG conjugation for the design of novel dosage forms and the modification of biomolecules. The peculiarities of PEGylated nanoparticles, liposomes, proteins, enzymes, and small drug and polyelectrolyte molecules and their influence on systemic drug delivery, including overcoming of various biological barriers and adhesion to mucosal tissues (mucoadhesion), are considered
Polymeric dibromomaleimides as extremely efficient disulfide bridging bioconjugation and pegylation agents
A series of dibromomaleimides have been shown to be very efficacious at insertion into peptidic disulfide bonds. This conjugation proceeds with a stoichiometric balance of reagents in buffered solutions in less than 15 min to give discrete products while maintaining the disulfide bridge and thus peptide conformation. The insertion is initiated by disulfide reduction using a water-soluble phosphine, tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) which allows for subsequent substitution of the two maleimide bromides by the generated thiols. Reaction of salmon calcitonin (sCT) with 2,3-dibromomaleimide (1.1 excess) in the presence of TCEP (1.1 equiv) in aqueous solution at pH 6.2 gives complete production of a single conjugate which requires no workup. A linear methoxy poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) was functionalized via a Mitsunobu reaction and used for the successful site-specific and rapid pegylation of sCT. This reaction occurs in 15 min with a small stoichiometry excess of the pegylating agent to give insertion at the disulfide with HPLC showing a single product and MALDI-ToF confirming conjugation. Attempts to use the group in a functional ATRP polymerization initiator led to polymerization inhibition. Thus, in order to prepare a range of functional polymers an indirect route was chosen via both azide and aniline functional initiators which were converted to 2,3-dibromomaleimides via appropriate reactions. For example, the azide functional polymer was reacted via a Huisgen CuAAC click reaction to an alkyne functional 2,3-dibromomaleimide. This new reagent allowed for the synthesis of conjugates of sCT with comb polymers derived from PEG methacrylic monomers which in addition gave appropriate cloud points. This reaction represents a highly efficient polymer conjugation method which circumvents problems of purification which normally arise from having to use large excesses of the conjugate. In addition, the tertiary structure of the peptide is efficiently maintained
Effect of PEGylation on protein hydrodynamics
We studied the effect of PEGylation on protein hydrodynamic behavior using hen egg-white lysozyme (HEWL) as a model protein. HEWL was PEGylated with a linear, 20 kDa PEG using reductive amination to produce PEG1-, PEG2-, and PEG3-HEWL. Near- and far-UVâCD spectroscopy revealed no significant effect of PEGylation on HEWL higher order structure. SDSâPAGE, mass spectrometry, online static light scattering (SLS) and sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation (SV-AUC) were employed to characterize the heterogeneity and molecular weights of the purified PEG-HEWL molecules, the results of which underscored the importance of using first-principle based methods for such analyses along with the underlying complexities of characterizing PEGâprotein conjugates. Hydrodynamic characterization of various linear and branched PEGs (5â40 kDa) and PEG-HEWL molecules was performed using dynamic light scattering (DLS) and SV-AUC. The PEG polymer exhibited a random-coil conformation in solution with the Mw â Rhn scaling relationship yielding a scaling exponent (n) = 2.07. Singly branched PEGs were also observed to exhibit random-coil behavior with Stokes radii identical to those of their linear counterparts. SV-AUC studies of PEG-HEWL showed PEG has a âparachuteâ like effect on HEWL, and dramatically increases the frictional drag; PEG-HEWL also exhibited random-coil-like characteristics in solution (n = 1.8). The sedimentation coefficient (s) of PEG-HEWL remained invariant with increasing degree of PEGylation, indicating that the increase in molecular mass from PEG was compensated by an almost equivalent increase in frictional drag. Our studies draw caution to using SV-AUC for the characterization of size heterogeneity of PEGâprotein mixtures