Abstract

Enzymes are essential to life and indispensable in a wide range of industries (food, pharmaceutical, medical, biosensing, etc.); however, a significant shortcoming of these fragile biological catalysts is their poor stability. To address this challenge, a variety of immobilization methods have been described to enhance the enzyme's stability. These immobilization methods generally are specific to an individual enzyme or optimal for a particular application. The aim of this study is to explore the utility of porous, indicator moiety-tagged, polymeric nanocapsules (NCs) for the encapsulation of enzymes and measurement of the enzyme's substrate. As a model enzyme, glucose oxidase (GOx) is used. The GOx enzyme-loaded, fluorophore-tagged NCs were synthesized by using self-assembled surfactant vesicle templates. To show that the biological activity of GOx is preserved during entrapment, the rate of the GOx enzyme catalyzed reaction was measured. To evaluate the protective features of the porous NCs, the encapsulated GOx enzyme activity was followed in the presence of hydrolytic enzymes. During the encapsulation of GOx and the purification of the GOx-loaded NCs, the GOx activity decayed less than 10%, and up to 30% of the encapsulated GOx activity could be retained for 3-5 days in the presence of hydrolytic enzymes. In support of the potentially unique advantages of the enzyme-loaded NCs, as a proof-of-concept example, the fluorophore-tagged, GOx-loaded NCs were used for the determination of glucose in the concentration range between 18 and 162 mg/dL and for imaging the distribution of glucose concentration in imaging experiments.

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