The use of hydrogen peroxide-releasing enzymes as a component to produce alternative and sustainable antimicrobial materials has aroused interest in the scientific community. However, the preparation of such materials requires an effective enzyme binding method that often involves the use of expensive and toxic chemicals. Here, we describe the development of an enzyme-based hydrogen peroxide-producing regenerated cellulose film (RCF) in which a cellobiohydrolase (CBHI) and a cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDHA) were efficiently adsorbed, 90.38 ± 2.2 and 82.40 ± 5.7%, respectively, without making use of cross-linkers. The enzyme adsorption kinetics and binding isotherm experiments showed high affinity of the proteins possessing cellulose-binding modules for RCF, suggesting that binding on regenerated cellulose via specific interactions can be an alternative method for enzyme immobilization. Resistance to compression and porosity at a micrometer scale were found to be tunable by changing cellulose concentration prior to film regeneration. The self-degradation process, triggered by stacking CBHI and CDHA (previously immobilized onto separate RCF), produced 0.15 nmol/min·cm of HO. Moreover, the production of HO was sustained for at least 24 h reaching a concentration of ∼2 mM. The activity of CDHA immobilized on RCF was not affected by reuse for at least 3 days (1 cycle/day), suggesting that no significant enzyme leakage occurred in that timeframe. In the material herein designed, cellulose (regenerated from a 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate/dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solution) serves both as support and substrate for the immobilized enzymes. The sequential reaction led to the production of HO at a micromolar-millimolar level revealing the potential use of the material as a self-degradable antimicrobial agent.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01393DOI Listing

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