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Construction of Uniform Monolayer- and Orientation-Tunable Enzyme Electrode by a Synthetic Glucose Dehydrogenase without Electron-Transfer Subunit via Optimized Site-Specific Gold-Binding Peptide Capable of Direct Electron Transfer

Authors
Lee, Yoo SeokBaek, SeungwooLee, HyeryeongReginald, Stacy SimaiKim, YeongeunKang, HyunsooChoi, In-GeolChang, In Seop
Issue Date
29-8월-2018
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Keywords
direct electron transfer; synthetic glucose dehydrogenase; gold-binding peptide; orientation; electron tunneling distance
Citation
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, v.10, no.34, pp.28615 - 28626
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume
10
Number
34
Start Page
28615
End Page
28626
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/73719
DOI
10.1021/acsami.8b08876
ISSN
1944-8244
Abstract
Direct electron transfer (DET) between enzymes and electrodes is a key issue for practical use of bioelectrocatalytic devices as a bioenergy process, such as enzymatic electrosynthesis, biosensors, and enzyme biofuel cells. To date, based on the DET of bioelectrocatalysis, less than 1% of the calculated theoretical current was transferred to final electron acceptor due to energy loss at enzyme-electrode interface. This study describes the design and construction of a synthetic glucose dehydrogenase (GDH; alpha and gamma subunits) combined with a gold-binding peptide at its amino or carboxy terminus for direct contact between enzyme and electrode. The fused gold-binding peptide facilitated stable immobilization of GDH and constructed uniform monolayer of GDH onto a Au electrode. Depending on the fused site of binding peptide to the enzyme complex, nine combinations of recombinant GDH proteins on the electrode show significantly different direct electron-transfer efficiency across the enzyme-electrode interface. The fusion of site-specific binding peptide to the catalytic subunit (alpha subunit, carboxy terminus) of the enzyme complex enabled apparent direct electron transfer (DET) across the enzyme-electrode interface even in the absence of the electron transfer subunit (i.e., beta subunit having cytochrome domain). The catalytic glucose oxidation current at an onset potential of ca. (-)0.46 V vs Ag/AgCl was associated with the appearance of an flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)/FADH(2) redox wave and a stabilized bioelectrocatalytic current of more than 100 mu A, determined from chronoamperometric analysis. Electron recovery was 7.64%, and the catalytic current generation was 249 mu A per GDH enzyme loading unit (U), several orders of magnitude higher than the values reported previously. These observations corroborated that the last electron donor facing to electrode was controlled to be in close proximity without electron-transfer intermediates and the native affinity for glucose was preserved. The design and construction of the site-specific "sticky-ended" proteins without loss of catalytic activity could be applied to other redox enzymes having a buried active site.
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