Abstract

In this paper, a novel procedure for the immobilization and stabilization of enzymes is proposed: the multipoint covalent attachment of bi-molecular enzyme aggregates. This immobilization protocol allows the “capture” and fixation of the enzyme aggregate on the support surface. In addition to stabilization by multipoint attachment, enzyme aggregation promotes very interesting stabilizing effects. In the presence of low concentrations of polyethylene glycol (30 %) the dimeric amine oxidase from Pisum sativum forms soluble bi-molecular aggregates. Enzyme aggregates were analyzed by Dynamic Light Scattering and by full chemical loading of a mesoporous support (10 % agarose gels activated with glyoxyl groups). The soluble aggregate was immobilized by multipoint attachment on glyoxyl- agarose at pH 8.5 though the four amino termini of the two dimeric molecules (Lys residues are not reactive at this pH). The immobilized aggregated structure cannot undergo any movement (translational or rotational) after multipoint attachment and the aggregate is “fixed” on the support surface even after the removal of PEG. The immobilized aggregate was further incubated at pH 10 in order to allow the Lys residues to react with the glyoxyl groups on the support. Enzyme aggregation has an important effect on enzyme stabilization: the aggregated derivative was 40 fold more stable than a similar derivative of the isolated enzyme and 200 fold more than native enzymes in experiments of thermal inactivation.

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