Abstract

Controlling interactions between enzymes and interaction partners, such as substrates, is important for applications in cellular biology and molecular biochemistry. A strategy for controlling enzyme access with substrate interaction partners is to exploit encapsulation of enzymes inside nanoparticles to limit the accessibility of the enzymes to large macromolecules, but allow free exchange of small-molecule substrates. The research here evaluates the encapsulation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase inside the bacteriophage P22 virus-like particle (VLP) to examine the ability to allow free soluble substrates access to the enzyme while blocking large macromolecular substrate interactions. The results show that the active elastase protease can be encapsulated inside the P22 VLP, which blocks its ability to disrupt cell monolayers, but allows soluble substrates to be catalytically cleaved, supporting the viability of this approach for future investigations.

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