2 research outputs found
Enhancing the Activity of Peptide-Based Artificial Hydrolase with Catalytic Ser/His/Asp Triad and Molecular Imprinting
In this study, an artificial hydrolase
was developed by combining
the catalytic Ser/His/Asp triad with <i>N</i>-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl
diphenylalanine (Fmoc-FF), followed by coassembly of the peptides
into nanofibers (CoA-HSD). The peptide-based nanofibers provide an
ideal supramolecular framework to support the functional groups. Compared
with the self-assembled catalytic nanofibers (SA-H), which contain
only the catalytic histidine residue, the highest activity of CoA-HSD
occurs when histidine, serine, and aspartate residues are at a ratio
of 40:1:1. This indicates that the well-ordered nanofiber structure
and the synergistic effects of serine and aspartate residues contribute
to the enhancement in activity. Additionally, for the first time,
molecular imprinting was applied to further enhance the activity of
the peptide-based artificial enzyme (CoA-HSD). <i>p</i>-NPA
was used as the molecular template to arrange the catalytic Ser/His/Asp
triad residues in the proper orientation. As a result, the activity
of imprinted coassembled CoA-HSD nanofibers is 7.86 times greater
than that of nonimprinted CoA-HSD and 13.48 times that of SA-H