화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biotechnology Letters, Vol.41, No.4-5, 605-611, 2019
Construction of a novel bioanode for amino acid powered fuel cells through an artificial enzyme cascade pathway
ObjectiveThe construction of a novel bioanode based on l-proline oxidation using a cascade reaction pathway comprised of thermostable dehydrogenases.ResultsA novel multi-enzymatic cascade pathway, containing four kinds of dehydrogenases from thermophiles (dye-linked l-proline dehydrogenase, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-dependent (1)-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, NAD-dependent l-glutamate dehydrogenase and dye-linked NADH dehydrogenase), was designed for the generation of six-electrons from one molecule of l-proline. The current density of the four-dehydrogenase-immobilized electrode, with a voltage of +450mV (relative to that of Ag/AgCl), was 226.8A/cm(2) in the presence of 10mM l-proline and 0.5mM ferrocene carboxylate at 50 degrees C. This value was 4.2-fold higher than that of a similar electrode containing a single dehydrogenase. In addition, about 54% of the initial current in the multi-enzyme cascade bioanode was maintained even after 15days.ConclusionsEfficient deep oxidation of l-proline by multiple-enzyme cascade reactions was achieved in our designed electrode. The multi-enzyme cascade bioanode, which was built using thermophilic dehydrogenases, showed high durability at room temperature. The long-term stability of the bioanode indicates that it shows great potential for applications as a long-lived enzymatic fuel cell.