Publications by authors named "Antonio L de Lacey"

Article Synopsis
  • Oxidoreductase enzymes, important in organic synthesis and pharmaceuticals, rely on NADH for reactions, creating a need for cost-effective NADH regeneration methods.
  • This study introduces a new amino-functionalized viologen that, when combined with diaphorase, effectively generates bioactive NADH with high selectivity and efficiency.
  • Testing revealed that this system significantly enhanced formate production compared to traditional methods, highlighting its potential for sustainable NADH regeneration at low energy requirements.
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There is a great deal of interest in the development of electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) that are stable and have high activity because this anodic half-reaction is the main bottleneck in water splitting and other key technologies. Cobalt and iron oxide and oxyhydroxide electrocatalysts constitute a cheaper alternative to the highly active and commonly used Ir- and Ru-based catalysts. Most of the described electrocatalysts require tedious synthetic and expensive preparation procedures.

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Galactose monitoring in individuals allows the prevention of harsh health conditions related to hereditary metabolic diseases like galactosemia. Current methods of galactose detection need development to obtain cheaper, more reliable, and more specific sensors. Enzyme-containing amperometric sensors based on galactose oxidase activity are a promising approach, which can be enhanced by means of their inclusion in a redox polymer coating.

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Adenosine-5-triphosphate (ATP) is the main energy vector in biological systems, thus its regeneration is an important issue for the application of many enzymes of interest in biocatalysis and synthetic biology. We have developed an electroenzymatic ATP regeneration system consisting in a gold electrode modified with a floating phospholipid bilayer that allows coupling the catalytic activity of two membrane-bound enzymes: NiFeSe hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris and FF-ATP synthase from Escherichia coli. Thus, H is used as a fuel for producing ATP.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are focusing on miniaturizing enzyme-based bioelectronics, which require 3D microstructured electrodes but are challenging to produce with traditional methods.
  • The study presents a new technique to enhance the adhesion of metal layers to polymer microstructures by using an interfacial adhesion layer, which solves issues of delamination that affect device performance.
  • A proof-of-concept demonstrated that the 3D conductive microelectrode, modified with glucose oxidase, effectively functions as a bioanode in a biofuel cell, showing promising conductivity and durability.*
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There is great interest in the use of Monolayer-Protected Gold Clusters (AuMPCs) as nanoscale capacitors in aqueous media for nanobiotechnological applications, such as bioelectrocatalysts, biofuel cells, and biosensors. However, AuMPCs exhibiting subattofarad double-layer capacitance at room temperature, and the resolution of single-electron charging, has been mainly obtained in an organic medium with nonfunctional capping ligands. We report here the synthesis of Thioctic Acid Monolayer-Protected Au Clusters (TA-AuMPCs) showing electrochemical single electron quantized capacitance charging in organic and aqueous solutions and when immobilized onto different self-assembled monolayer-modified gold electrodes.

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Clean energy vectors are needed towards a fossil fuel-free society, diminishing both greenhouse effect and pollution. Electrochemical water splitting is a clean route to obtain green hydrogen, the cleanest fuel; although efficient electrocatalysts are required to avoid high overpotentials in this process. The combination of inorganic semiconductors with biocatalysts for photoelectrochemical H production is an alternative approach to overcome this challenge.

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We aim to clarify the ligninolytic capabilities of dye-decolorizing peroxidases (DyPs) from bacteria and fungi, compared to fungal lignin peroxidase (LiP) and versatile peroxidase (VP). With this purpose, DyPs from sp., , and , VP from , and LiP from were produced, and their kinetic constants and reduction potentials determined.

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The decrease of greenhouse gases such as CO has become a key challenge for the human kind and the study of the electrocatalytic properties of CO-reducing enzymes such as formate dehydrogenases is of importance for this goal. In this work, we study the covalent bonding of Hildenborough FdhAB formate dehydrogenase to chemically modified gold and low-density graphite electrodes, using electrostatic interactions for favoring oriented immobilization of the enzyme. Electrochemical measurements show both bioelectrocatalytic oxidation of formate and reduction of CO by direct electron transfer (DET).

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Article Synopsis
  • ATP is an essential molecule that indicates the presence of microbial colonies, crucial for monitoring health hazards in certain environments.
  • A potentiometric biosensor was developed using ATP-synthase from E. coli, which is integrated into a phospholipid layer on modified gold electrodes.
  • This biosensor can accurately measure ATP concentrations from 1 μM to 1 mM, providing a fast and reliable method for detecting microbial contamination on-site.
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To investigate how ligninolytic peroxidases acquired the uniquely high redox potential they show today, their ancestors were resurrected and characterized. Unfortunately, the transient Compounds I (CI) and II (CII) from peroxide activation of the enzyme resting state (RS) are unstable. Therefore, the reduction potentials (E°') of the three redox couples (CI/RS, CI/CII and CII/RS) were estimated (for the first time in a ligninolytic peroxidase) from equilibrium concentrations analyzed by stopped-flow UV/Vis spectroscopy.

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Article Synopsis
  • The [NiFeSe] hydrogenases are a unique subgroup of hydrogenases, characterized by the presence of selenocysteine as a ligand to nickel in their active site.
  • These enzymes exhibit notable catalytic properties, making them promising for biological hydrogen production and bioelectrochemical uses, including high hydrogen production, preference for hydrogen evolution, low inhibition from hydrogen, and partial tolerance to oxygen.
  • The text discusses the methods used to study the [NiFeSe] hydrogenase from D. vulgaris Hildenborough and the development of a system to produce variant forms of this enzyme.
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The genome of the sulfate-reducing and anaerobic bacterium Desulfovibrio fructosovorans encodes different hydrogenases. Among them is Hnd, a tetrameric cytoplasmic [FeFe] hydrogenase that has previously been described as an NADP-specific enzyme (Malki et al., 1995).

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Respiratory complex I (CpI) is a key player in the way organisms obtain energy, being an energy transducer, which couples nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)/quinone oxidoreduction with proton translocation by a mechanism that remains elusive so far. In this work, we monitored the function of CpI in a biomimetic, supported lipid membrane system assembled on a 4-aminothiophenol (4-ATP) self-assembled monolayer by surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy. 4-ATP serves not only as a linker molecule to a nanostructured gold surface but also as pH sensor, as indicated by concomitant density functional theory calculations.

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An enzymatic electrosynthesis system was created by combining an aldehyde deformylating oxygenase (ADO) from cyanobacteria that catalyzes the decarbonylation of fatty aldehydes to alkanes and formic acid with an electrochemical interface. This system is able to produce a range of alkanes (octane to propane) from aldehydes and alcohols. The combination of this bioelectrochemical system with a hydrogenase bioanode yields a H /heptanal enzymatic fuel cell (EFC) able to simultaneously generate electrical energy with a maximum current density of 25 μA cm at 0.

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An infrared spectroelectrochemical study of Trametes hirsuta laccase and Magnaporthe oryzae bilirubin oxidase has been performed using azide, an inhibitor of multicopper oxidases, as an active infrared probe incorporated into the T2/T3 copper cluster of the enzymes. The redox potential-controlled measurements indicate that N stretching IR bands of azide ion bound to the T2/T3 cluster are only detected for the oxidized enzymes, confirming that azide only binds to Cu. Moreover, the process of binding/dissociation of azide ion is shown to be reversible.

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We detail a mediator- and membrane-free enzymatic glucose/oxygen biofuel cell based on transparent and nanostructured conducting supports. Chemically modified indium tin oxide nanoparticle modified electrodes were used to substantially increase the active surface area without significantly compromising transparency. Two different procedures for surface nanostructuring were employed, viz.

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Hydrogenases are highly active enzymes for hydrogen production and oxidation. [NiFeSe] hydrogenases, in which selenocysteine is a ligand to the active site Ni, have high catalytic activity and a bias for H production. In contrast to [NiFe] hydrogenases, they display reduced H inhibition and are rapidly reactivated after contact with oxygen.

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Nitrogenases are the only enzymes known to reduce molecular nitrogen (N ) to ammonia (NH ). By using methyl viologen (N,N'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium) to shuttle electrons to nitrogenase, N reduction to NH can be mediated at an electrode surface. The coupling of this nitrogenase cathode with a bioanode that utilizes the enzyme hydrogenase to oxidize molecular hydrogen (H ) results in an enzymatic fuel cell (EFC) that is able to produce NH from H and N while simultaneously producing an electrical current.

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ATP, the molecule used by living organisms to supply energy to many different metabolic processes, is synthesized mostly by the ATPase synthase using a proton or sodium gradient generated across a lipid membrane. We present evidence that a modified electrode surface integrating a NiFeSe hydrogenase and a F1 F0 -ATPase in a lipid membrane can couple the electrochemical oxidation of H2 to the synthesis of ATP. This electrode-assisted conversion of H2 gas into ATP could serve to generate this biochemical fuel locally when required in biomedical devices or enzymatic synthesis of valuable products.

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cathodes. Nanostructuring was provided by gold nanorods (AuNRs), which were characterized and covalently attached to electrodes made of low-density graphite. The nanostructured electrode was the scaffold for covalent and oriented attachment of ThLc.

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[NiFe]-hydrogenases are well-studied enzymes capable of oxidizing molecular hydrogen and reducing protons. EPR and FTIR spectroscopic studies have shown that these enzymes can be isolated in several redox states that include paramagnetic oxidized inactive Ni-A and Ni-B species and a reduced Ni-C form. The latter and the diamagnetic respectively more oxidized Ni-SI and more reduced Ni-R forms are generally thought to be involved in the catalytic cycle of [NiFe]-hydrogenases.

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The heterodimeric [NiFe] hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio fructosovorans catalyzes the reversible oxidation of H2 into protons and electrons. The catalytic intermediates have been attributed to forms of the active site (NiSI, NiR, and NiC) detected using spectroscopic methods under potentiometric but non-catalytic conditions. Here, we produced variants by replacing the conserved Thr-18 residue in the small subunit with Ser, Val, Gln, Gly, or Asp, and we analyzed the effects of these mutations on the kinetic (H2 oxidation, H2 production, and H/D exchange), spectroscopic (IR, EPR), and structural properties of the enzyme.

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Energy-transduction mechanisms in living organisms, such as photosynthesis and respiration, store light and chemical energy in the form of an electrochemical gradient created across a lipid bilayer. Herein we show that the proton concentration at an electrode/phospholipid-bilayer interface can be controlled and monitored electrochemically by immobilizing a membrane-bound hydrogenase. Thus, the energy derived from the electroenzymatic oxidation of H2 can be used to generate a proton gradient across the supported biomimetic membrane.

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