Engineered Anchor Peptide LCI with a Cobalt Cofactor Enhances Oxidation Efficiency of Polystyrene Microparticles

A typical component of polymer waste is polystyrene (PS) used in numerous applications, but degraded only slowly in the environment due to its hydrophobic properties. To increase the reactivity of polystyrene, polar groups need to be introduced. Here, biohybrid catalysts based on the engineered anch...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Angewandte Chemie International Edition Vol. 63; no. 13; pp. e202317419 - n/a
Main Authors: Wang, Dong, Ingram, Aaron A., Luka, Julian, Mao, Maochao, Ahrens, Leon, Bienstein, Marian, Spaniol, Thomas P., Schwaneberg, Ulrich, Okuda, Jun
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Germany Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 22-03-2024
Edition:International ed. in English
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Summary:A typical component of polymer waste is polystyrene (PS) used in numerous applications, but degraded only slowly in the environment due to its hydrophobic properties. To increase the reactivity of polystyrene, polar groups need to be introduced. Here, biohybrid catalysts based on the engineered anchor peptide LCI_F16C are presented, which are capable of attaching to polystyrene microparticles and hydroxylating benzylic C−H bonds in polystyrene microparticles using commercially available oxone as oxidant. LCI peptides achieve a dense surface coverage of PS through monolayer formation within minutes in aqueous solutions at ambient temperature. The catalytically active cobalt cofactor Co‐L1 or Co‐L2 with a modified NNNN macrocyclic TACD ligand (TACD=1,4,7,10‐tetraazacyclododecane) is covalently bound to the anchor peptide LCI through a maleimide linker. Compared to the free cofactors, a 12‐ to 15‐fold improvement in catalytic activity using biohybrid catalysts based on LCI_F16C was observed. Engineered anchor peptide LCI_F16C with a flexible cobalt cofactor Co‐L2 hydroxylated polystyrene microparticles using commercially available oxone as oxidant. The oxidation using biohybrid catalyst (Co‐L2@LCI_F16C) showed 15 times higher functionalization level than using the free cobalt cofactors.
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ISSN:1433-7851
1521-3773
1521-3773
DOI:10.1002/anie.202317419