JOURNAL ARTICLE

Combined Physical and Chemical Immobilization of Glucose Oxidase in Alginate Microspheres Improves Stability of Encapsulation and Activity

Huiguang ZhuRohit SrivastavaJ. Quincy BrownMichael J. McShane

Year: 2005 Journal:   Bioconjugate Chemistry Vol: 16 (6)Pages: 1451-1458   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Chemical sensors utilizing immobilized enzymes and proteins are important for monitoring chemical processes and biological systems. In this study, calcium-cross-linked alginate hydrogel microspheres were fabricated as enzyme carriers by an emulsification technique. Glucose oxidase (GOx) was encapsulated in alginate microspheres using three different methods: physical entrapment (emulsion), chemical conjugation (conjugation), and a combination of physical entrapment and chemical conjugation (emulsion-conjugation). Nano-organized coatings were applied on alginate/GOx microspheres using the layer-by-layer self-assembly technique in order to stabilize the hydrogel/enzyme system under biological environment. The encapsulation of GOx and formation of nanofilm coating on alginate microspheres were verified with FTIR spectral analysis, zeta-potential analysis, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. To compare both the immobilization properties of enzyme encapsulation techniques and the influence of nanofilms with uncoated microspheres, the relationship between enzyme loading, release, and effective GOx activity (enzyme activity per unit protein loading) were studied over a period of four weeks. The results produced four key findings: (1) the emulsion-conjugation technique improved the stability of GOx in alginate microspheres compared to the emulsion technique, reducing the GOx leaching from microsphere from 50% to 17%; (2) the polyelectrolyte nanofilm coatings increased the GOx stability over time, but also reduced the effective GOx activity; (3) the effective GOx activity for the emulsion-conjugation technique (about 3.5 x 10(-)(5) AU microg(-)(1) s(-)(1)) was higher than that for other methods, and did not change significantly over four weeks; and (4) the GOx concentration, when compared after one week for microspheres with three bilayers of poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/sodium poly(styrene sulfonate) ({PAH/PSS}) coating, was highest for the emulsion-conjugation technique. As a result, the comparison of these three techniques showed the emulsion-conjugation technique to be a potentially effective and practical way to fabricate alginate/GOx microspheres for implantable glucose biosensor application.

Keywords:
Glucose oxidase Chemistry Emulsion Chemical engineering Immobilized enzyme Polyelectrolyte Chemical stability Microparticle Chromatography Polymer Organic chemistry Enzyme

Metrics

153
Cited By
7.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Drug Delivery Systems
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmaceutical Science
Hydrogels: synthesis, properties, applications
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Medicine
Polymer Surface Interaction Studies
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Surfaces, Coatings and Films

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Immobilization of Glucose Oxidase on Sodium Alginate Microspheres

P. Yu. Stadol’nikovaBoris B. TikhonovE. A. PrutenskayaА. И. СидоровMikhail G. Sulman

Journal:   Прикладная биохимия и микробиология Year: 2023 Vol: 59 (1)Pages: 56-64
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Immobilization of Glucose Oxidase in Alginate-Chitosan Microcapsules

Xia WangKe‐Xue ZhuHuiming Zhou

Journal:   International Journal of Molecular Sciences Year: 2011 Vol: 12 (5)Pages: 3042-3054
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Immobilization of glucose oxidase within calcium alginate gel capsules

Ana BlandinoM. Macı́asDomingo Cantero

Journal:   Process Biochemistry Year: 2001 Vol: 36 (7)Pages: 601-606
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.