Abstract

Glucose oxidase (GOD) has a wide range of applications in biosensing and cancer treatment as a result of its unique biocatalytic properties. More importantly, GOD could synergistically enhance the cancer therapeutic effect when combined with other cancer therapeutic strategies. However, the interaction of GOD with a cancer therapeutic agent has not been well-studied. Herein, the thermodynamic properties of the interaction between black phosphorus quantum dots (BPQDs) and GOD were systematically elucidated, and the dose-dependent conformational and enzymatic activity changes of BPQDs on GOD were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed. The results indicated that the stoichiometric ratio of BPQDs to GOD was approximately 1:1. In particular, fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism spectra, and Fourier transform infrared spectra have synergistically studied the changes in secondary and tertiary conformations of GOD induced by BPQDs. Higher doses of BPQDs resulted in a loose structure of GOD but still maintained the native conformation and preserved effective enzymatic activity, effectively catalyzing the production of H2O2 from glucose in a cell. The interaction mechanism between BPQDs and GOD provides a theoretical basis for the design of GOD-based multimodal synergistic cancer therapy and its clinical translation analysis.

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