Polymers, Colloids & Interfaces, Poster
PI-145

Increased heat stability of α-chymotrypsin through its confinement in liposomes

M. Yoshimoto1, J. Yamada1, K. Mizoguchi1, P. Walde2
1Department of Applied Chemistry, Yamaguchi University, Japan, 2Polymer Chemistry, Department of Materials, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

For applications of enzymes in confined space, for example inside liposomes (lipid vesicles), the enzyme stability is a critical issue [1]. During the course of our investigations on the entrapment of enzymes inside submicrometer-sized liposomes, we found that the confinement of α-chymotrypsin in liposomes formed from POPC (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) leads to a significantly increased thermostability of the enzyme. Since through the method used – dispersing a dried POPC layer with an aqueous enzyme solution, followed by polycarbonate membrane extrusion ‒ the enzyme entrapment in the liposomes occurs during liposome formation, a stochastic enzyme distribution among the liposomes is obtained. Heat stability experiments showed that a considerable fraction of liposomal α-chymotrypsin is still active after being treated at 80 °C for 30 min, whereas the free enzyme is completely deactivated. For liposome-confined α-chymotrypsin, the heat stability increases as the average number of enzyme molecules per liposome decreases. This high heat tolerance can be explained by a decrease in interactions between partially unfolded enzyme molecules as a result of a decrease in the number of enzyme molecules per liposome compartment. In the extreme case, there is no opportunity for the irreversible formation of enzyme aggregates – which leads to enzyme deactivation ‒ in the case of single enzyme molecule confinement. Whether this finding also holds for other monomeric enzymes is currently under investigation.

Acknowledgment: This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI grant number 15KK0241.

References: [1] Küchler, A., Yoshimoto, M., Luginbühl, S., Mavelli, F., Walde, P. Nature Nanotechnol., 2016, 11, 409. [2] Yoshimoto, M., Yamada, J., Baba, M., Walde, P. ChemBioChem, 2016, 17, 1221.