Confinement of Triple-Enzyme-Involved Antioxidant Cascade in Two-Dimensional Nanostructure
Adél Szerlauth, Árpád Varga, Tamara Madácsy, Dániel Sebők, Sahra Bashiri, Mariusz Skwarczyński, István Tóth, József Maléth, István Szilágyi
Abstract
Application of antioxidant enzymes in medical or industrial processes is limited due to their high sensitivity to environmental conditions. Incorporation of such enzymes in nanostructures provides a promising route to obtain highly efficient and robust biocatalytic system to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS). Here, this question was addressed by confinement of superoxide dismutase (SOD), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and catalase (CAT) enzymes into nanostructures containing polyelectrolyte building blocks (alginate (Alg) and trimethyl chitosan (TMC)) and delaminated layered double hydroxide (dLDH) nanoparticle support. The nanocomposite possessed excellent structural and colloidal stability, while antioxidant tests revealed that the enzymes remained active upon immobilization and the developed composite greatly reduced intracellular oxidative stress in two-dimensional cell cultures. Moreover, it effectively prevented hydrogen peroxide-induced double stranded DNA breaks, which is a common consequence of oxidative stress. The results provide important tools to design complex nanostructures with multienzymatic antioxidant activities for ROS scavenging.