Dye decolorizing peroxidases (DyP) have attracted interest
for
applications such as dye-containing wastewater remediation and biomass
processing. So far, efforts to improve operational pH ranges, activities,
and stabilities have focused on site-directed mutagenesis and directed
evolution strategies. Here, we show that the performance of the DyP
from Bacillus subtilis can be drastically
boosted without the need for complex molecular biology procedures
by simply activating the enzyme electrochemically in the absence of
externally added H2O2. Under these conditions,
the enzyme shows specific activities toward a variety of chemically
different substrates that are significantly higher than in its canonical
operation. Moreover, it presents much broader pH activity profiles
with the maxima shifted toward neutral to alkaline. We also show that
the enzyme can be successfully immobilized on biocompatible electrodes.
When actuated electrochemically, the enzymatic electrodes have two
orders of magnitude higher turnover numbers than with the standard
H2O2-dependent operation and preserve about
30% of the initial electrocatalytic activity after 5 days of operation–storage
cycles.
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