“…Recently, metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have been widely used as protective shells for enzymes. − Research has shown that MOF shells can enhance their biochemical properties such as thermal stability, reusability, organic solvent resistance, and the stability of encapsulated enzymes through structural constraints. , In addition, the strong interaction between metal ions and imidazole esters enables ZIF-8 to maintain structural integrity in common solvents, including water . Moreover, the synthetic conditions of MOF immobilized enzymes are “green”, without heating, pressure, or organic solvents, which has a positive impact on green chemistry. − However, MOFs are crystalline powders with practical limitations such as easy aggregation and recycling difficulties. In addition, they can only be used in stirred reactions and not in continuous fluid catalytic reactions, resulting in low reaction efficiencies. ,− Therefore, the application of enzyme immobilization in continuous microfluidic reactors has aroused great interest.…”