Chemical linkers
are frequently used in enzyme immobilization to improve enzyme flexibility
and activity, whereas peptide linkers, although ubiquitous in protein
engineering, are much less explored in enzyme immobilization. Here,
we report peptide-linker-assisted noncovalent immobilization of the
bacteriolytic enzyme lysostaphin (Lst) to generate anti-Staphylococcus aureus surfaces. Lst was immobilized
through affinity tags onto a silica surface (glass slides) and nickel
nitrilotriacetic acid (NiNTA) agarose beads via silica-binding peptides
(SiBPs) or a hexahistidine tag (His-tag) fused at the C-terminus of
Lst, respectively. By inserting specific peptide linkers upstream
of the SiBP or His-tag, the immobilized enzymes killed >99.5% of S. aureus ATCC 6538 cells (108 CFU/mL)
within 3 h in buffer and could be reused multiple times without significant
loss of activity. In contrast, immobilized Lst without a peptide linker
was less active/stable. Molecular modeling of Lst–linker–affinity
tag constructs illustrated that the presence of the peptide linkers
enhanced the molecular flexibility of the proximal Lst binding domain,
which interacts with the bacterial substrate, and such increased flexibility
correlated with increased antimicrobial activity. We further show
that Lst immobilized onto NiNTA beads retained the ability to kill ∼99%
of a 108 CFU/mL microbial challenge even in the presence
of 1% of a commercial anionic surfactant, C12-14 alcohol EO 3:1 sodium
sulfate, when the Lst construct contained a decapeptide linker containing
glycine, serine, and alanine residues. This linker-assisted immobilization
strategy could be extended to an unrelated lytic enzyme, the endolysin
PlyPH, to target Bacillus anthracis Sterne cells either in buffer or in the presence of anionic surfactants.
Our approach, therefore, provides a facile route to the use of antimicrobial
enzymes on surfaces