Amino-Acid-Based Metallo-Hydrogel That Acts Like an Esterase

ACS Appl Bio Mater. 2018 Nov 19;1(5):1717-1724. doi: 10.1021/acsabm.8b00513. Epub 2018 Nov 7.

Abstract

A histidine-based amphiphile containing a C14 fatty acyl chain, N- histidyl N'-myristry ethyl amine (AM1, 14.7 mM) forms hydrogels in the presence of Fe3+ (within the range 1.47 to 4.41 mM) and Hg2+ (within the range 3.67 to 11.02 mM) ions in aqueous dispersions at pH 6.6 (27 °C). The imidazole ring of the histidine residue plays a vital role to interact with these metal-ions. The thermal and mechanical stability of these metallo-hydrogels can be tuned by changing the proportion of amphiphile to metal ion ratio (1:0.1 to 1:0.3 for Fe3+-containing gel and 1:0.25 to 1:0.75 for Hg2+-containing gel). The metallo-hydrogels were characterized by different spectroscopic and microscopic techniques, low- and wide-angle powder X-ray diffraction, and small-angle X-ray scattering studies. FT-IR and NMR spectroscopic studies indicate the participation of the imidazole ring in metal-ion binding. Low- and wide-angle powder X-ray diffraction and small-angle X-ray scattering data are in favor of a layered structure of the supramolecular assembly of the AM1 in the presence of metal-ions. Both, the amphiphiles and the metal ion induced hydrogels reveal catalytic activity of p-nitrophenyl esters hydrolysis for the acetyl, n-butyl and n-octyl esters . Ferric ion containing metallo-hydrogel exhibits higher catalytic activity than the corresponding AM1 aggregate in the absence of metal ions.

Keywords: ester hydrolysis; esterase activity; histidine-based amphiphile; metallo-hydrogel; self-assembly.