Carbon Dots as Versatile Photosensitizers for Solar-Driven Catalysis with Redox Enzymes
Authors
Hutton, GAM
Martindale, Benjamin
Caputo, CA
Lockwood, CWJ
Butt, JN
Publication Date
2016-12-28Journal Title
Journal of the American Chemical Society
ISSN
0002-7863
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Volume
138
Issue
51
Pages
16722-16730
Language
English
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Hutton, G., Reuillard, B., Martindale, B., Caputo, C., Lockwood, C., Butt, J., & Reisner, E. (2016). Carbon Dots as Versatile Photosensitizers for Solar-Driven Catalysis with Redox Enzymes. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 138 (51), 16722-16730. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b10146
Abstract
Light-driven enzymatic catalysis is enabled by the productive coupling of a protein to a photosensitizer. Photosensitizers used in such hybrid systems are typically costly, toxic, and/or fragile, with limited chemical versatility. Carbon dots (CDs) are low-cost, nanosized light-harvesters that are attractive photosensitizers for biological systems as they are water-soluble, photostable, nontoxic, and their surface chemistry can be easily modified. We demonstrate here that CDs act as excellent light-absorbers in two semibiological photosynthetic systems utilizing either a fumarate reductase (FccA) for the solar-driven hydrogenation of fumarate to succinate or a hydrogenase (H$_{2}$ase) for reduction of protons to H$_{2}$. The tunable surface chemistry of the CDs was exploited to synthesize positively charged ammonium-terminated CDs (CD-NHMe$_{2}$$^{+}$), which were capable of transferring photoexcited electrons directly to the negatively charged enzymes with high efficiency and stability. Enzyme-based turnover numbers of 6000 mol succinate (mol FccA)$^{-1}$ and 43,000 mol H$_{2}$ (mol H$_{2}$ase)$^{-1}$ were reached after 24 h. Negatively charged carboxylate-terminated CDs (CD-CO$_{2}$$^{-}$) displayed little or no activity, and the electrostatic interactions at the CD–enzyme interface were determined to be essential to the high photocatalytic activity observed with CD-NHMe$_{2}$$^{+}$. The modular surface chemistry of CDs together with their photostability and aqueous solubility make CDs versatile photosensitizers for redox enzymes with great scope for their utilization in photobiocatalysis.
Relationships
Is supplemented by: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.6573
Sponsorship
This work was supported by a Cambridge Australia Poynton PhD scholarship (to G.A.M.H.), the BBSRC (BB/K010220/1 to E.R. and BB/K009885/1 to J.N.B.), an Oppenheimer PhD scholarship (to B.C.M.M.), and a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellowship (GAN 624997 to C.A.C.).
Funder references
BBSRC (BB/J000124/1)
BBSRC (BB/K010220/1)
EPSRC (EP/K039520/1)
Embargo Lift Date
2100-01-01
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b10146
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/262696
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International, Attribution 4.0 International, Attribution 4.0 International, Attribution 4.0 International