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Low back-pressure hierarchically structured multichannel microfluidic bioreactors for rapid protein digestion - proof of concept

journal contribution
posted on 2016-06-20, 14:08 authored by Katarzyna Szymanska, Monika Peitrowska, Jacek Kocurek, Katarzyna Maresz, Agnieszka Koreniuk, Julita Mrowiec-Białoń, Piotr Widłak, Edmond MagnerEdmond Magner, Andrzej Jarzębski
A novel, easy-to-fabricate monolithic enzymatic microreactor with a hierarchical, torturous structure of flow-through channels of micrometric sizes and large mesopores was shown to enable rapid and very efficient digestion of proteins at high yields and exceptionally low back-pressures. Four silica monoliths with bi-modal 3D pore structure in micrometer and nanometer size scales were synthesized and characterized for structural and flow properties. The monolith with the highest total pore volume (4 cm(3)/g) and flow through channels 20-30 mu m in size, was further functionalized with trypsin to obtain multichannel immobilized enzyme (proteolytic) reactor (IMER). The value of permeability coefficient K evaluated for water (similar to 2.0 . 10(-11)) was found to be two orders of magnitude higher in the novel reactor than reported before for high-performance IMERs, enabling the flow rates of 750 mL/cm(2) min at pressure gradients of 64 kPa/cm. Very high practical potentials of the novel microbioreactor were demonstrated in the proteolysis of cytochrome c (Cyt-c) and myoglobin (Myo), without any earlier pretreatment. MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry analysis of sequence coverage was high: 70% (Cyt-c) and 90% (Myo) for 24 min digestion, and 39% (Cyt-c) and 53% (Myo) when the proteolysis time was reduced to 2.4 min. The proposed microreactors make full use of all advantages of microfuidic devices and mesoporous biocatalysts, and offer exceptional possibilities for biochemical/proteolytic applications in both large (production) and small (analytical) scales. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

History

Publication

Chemical Engineering Journal;287, pp. 148-154

Publisher

Elsevier

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

National Science Center (NSC) of Poland, National Science Center (NCN) of Poland

Rights

This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Chemical Engineering Journal. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Chemical Engineering Journal, 287, pp. 148-154, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2015.10.120

Language

English

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