Background: Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are becoming more important as carriers, because of
their large specific surface area and easy separability. Magnetic nanoparticles are increasingly used
in enzyme technology, diagnostics, and drug delivery.
Major results: For the directed and almost irreversible immobilization of proteins on MNPs, we have
developed a new selective (His-Arg)4 peptide-tag, that binds fusion proteins directly from an E. coli
cell lysate to non-functionalized, low-cost MNPs. Using the immobilization of an ene-reductase as an
example, we could demonstrate that the fusion with this tag increases thermostability without
reducing overall activity (ER w/o tag: t1/2 = 3.7 h, (HR)4-ER: t1/2 = 9.9 h). Immobilization by adsorption
in Tris buffer resulted in very high enzyme loads with approx. 380 mg g-1 and 67% residual activity.
The immobilization on the MNPs allowed a fast concentration, buffer exchange, and reuse. While
about 50% of the activity was lost after the first reuse, we were able to show that the activity did not
decrease further and was stable for another nine cycles.
Conclusion: According to our studies, our tag highly works for any kind of immobilization on MNPs
and holds the potential for enzyme immobilizations as well as for drug delivery and sensors.
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Background: Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are becoming more important as carriers, because of
their large specific surface area and easy separability. Magnetic nanoparticles are increasingly used
in enzyme technology, diagnostics, and drug delivery.
Major results: For the directed and almost irreversible immobilization of proteins on MNPs, we have
developed a new selective (His-Arg)4 peptide-tag, that binds fusion proteins directly from an E. coli
cell lysate to non-functionalized, low-cost...
»