An
industrially important enzyme, Candida antarctica lipase B (CalB), was modified with a range of functional polymers
including hydrophilic, hydrophobic, anionic, and cationic character
using a “grafting to” approach. We determined the impact
of polymer chain length on CalB activity by synthesizing biohybrids
of CalB with each polymer at three different chain lengths, using
reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization.
The activity of CalB in both aqueous and aqueous-organic media mixtures
was significantly enhanced for acrylamide (Am) and N,N-dimethyl acrylamide (DMAm) conjugates, with activity
remaining approximately constant in 25 and 50% ethanol solvent systems.
Interestingly, the activity of N,N-dimethylaminopropyl-acrylamide (DMAPA) conjugates increased gradually
with increasing organic solvent content in the system. Contrary to
other literature reports, our study showed significantly diminished
activity for hydrophobic polymer-protein conjugates. Functional thermal
stability assays also displayed a considerable enhancement of retained
activity of Am, DMAm, and DMAPA conjugates compared to the native
CalB enzyme. Thus, this study provides an insight into possible advances
in lipase production, which can lead to new improved lipase bioconjugates
with increased activity and stability.
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