The fragility and high cost of enzymes represent critical challenges limiting their practical application in the removal of pesticides. Herein, an aryloxyphenoxypropionate herbicide-hydrolyzing enzyme, QpeH, was purified via one-step affinity… Click to show full abstract
The fragility and high cost of enzymes represent critical challenges limiting their practical application in the removal of pesticides. Herein, an aryloxyphenoxypropionate herbicide-hydrolyzing enzyme, QpeH, was purified via one-step affinity chromatography and embedded into two types of zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) through biomimetic mineralization. The catalytic activity towards the herbicide quizalofop-P-ethyl, the loading capacity and efficiency of the resulting two composites, QpeH@ZIF-10 with cruciate flower-like morphology and QpeH@ZIF-8 with rhombic dodecahedral morphology, were compared. Both composites had excellent stability and reusability after 10 reuse cycles, with QpeH@ZIF-10 having a better performance. More importantly, when applied for the removal of quizalofop-P-ethyl pollution in the watermelon field, QpeH@ZIF-10 (88%) showed a remarkably improved degradation efficiency compared to QpeH@ZIF-8 (84%) despite the latter having a greater loading capacity. Finally, the use of QpeH@ZIF composites was shown to recover the bacterial community in soil. This work provides a new insight into the low-cost synthesis of nanobiocatalysts combining simple purified enzymes and metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for the remediation of pesticide-contaminated soils.
               
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