Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability

Aquaporins are water channel proteins with high permeability and solute rejection, making them ideal components for the preparation of desalination biomimetic membranes. In one strategy, E. coli aquaporin Z (AqpZ) proteoliposomes are immobilized in a polyamide layer formed by interfacial polymerizat...

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Main Authors: Sharma, Loveena, Ye, Li, Yong, Clare, Seetharaman, Ramya, Kho, Kailing, Surya, Wahyu, Wang, Rong, Torres, Jaume
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161530
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1615302022-09-10T23:31:26Z Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability Sharma, Loveena Ye, Li Yong, Clare Seetharaman, Ramya Kho, Kailing Surya, Wahyu Wang, Rong Torres, Jaume School of Biological Sciences School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Singapore Membrane Technology Centre Science::Biological sciences Engineering::Environmental engineering Aquaporin Z Fluorescent Dyes Aquaporins are water channel proteins with high permeability and solute rejection, making them ideal components for the preparation of desalination biomimetic membranes. In one strategy, E. coli aquaporin Z (AqpZ) proteoliposomes are immobilized in a polyamide layer formed by interfacial polymerization at the inner surface of hollow fibers. However, once polymerization occurs, the system is almost a black box where it is difficult to disentangle the relative contribution to performance of (i) water permeation through AqpZ channels and (ii) the possible modification of the properties or structure of the polymer layer by the mere presence of protein and lipid. Indeed, the fate of protein and lipid once the polymer is formed, and how much of it is actually used, is under debate. Also, the performance of these modules has been reported to be stable over several months. This is intriguing because of the expected degradation of functional AqpZ and lipid with time. Herein, we used lipid and AqpZ, both fluorescently labeled, to unequivocally localize both components only at the inner surface of the hollow fibers. To characterize module performance, we tested about 30 half-inch modules containing five hollow fibers each. Those reconstituted with wild type AqpZ produced higher permeability (∼8.5 ± 0.9 LMH/bar) than those reconstituted with AqpZ mutant (R189A) (∼5.6 ± 1.7 LMH/bar) or lipid-only liposomes (3.7 ± 1.1 LMH/bar). However, while these differences are significant, they are smaller than expected from the comparison of relative permeabilities of membranes incorporating wild-type AqpZ, R189A mutant and only-lipid. In addition, we show that in a five-month long experiment, performance of two of these modules showed only minor deterioration, if any, which is not consistent with the observed rapid degradation of proteoliposomes at room temperature. Overall, these data obtained in this set-up suggests that although both AqpZ and lipid are localized at the inner of the hollow fibers, they mainly behave as additives that modify the properties of the robust polyamide layer. A small contribution of AqpZ channel activity to module performance is possible, but to be significant it would require full coverage and a higher protein density in the proteoliposomes, which at present cannot be achieved in the current protocol. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Submitted/Accepted version This research was funded by grants awarded to J.T. by the Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE) Tier 1 grant RT13/19 and National Research Foundation (NRF) Industry Alignment Fund- Pre-positioning (IAF-PP), awarded to W.R. Industry Alignment Fund- Pre-positioning (IAF-PP) awarded to W.R. 2022-09-06T08:25:18Z 2022-09-06T08:25:18Z 2022 Journal Article Sharma, L., Ye, L., Yong, C., Seetharaman, R., Kho, K., Surya, W., Wang, R. & Torres, J. (2022). Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability. Journal of Membrane Science, 654, 120551-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.memsci.2022.120551 0376-7388 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161530 10.1016/j.memsci.2022.120551 2-s2.0-85128239252 654 120551 en RT13/19 Journal of Membrane Science © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Engineering::Environmental engineering
Aquaporin Z
Fluorescent Dyes
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Engineering::Environmental engineering
Aquaporin Z
Fluorescent Dyes
Sharma, Loveena
Ye, Li
Yong, Clare
Seetharaman, Ramya
Kho, Kailing
Surya, Wahyu
Wang, Rong
Torres, Jaume
Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
description Aquaporins are water channel proteins with high permeability and solute rejection, making them ideal components for the preparation of desalination biomimetic membranes. In one strategy, E. coli aquaporin Z (AqpZ) proteoliposomes are immobilized in a polyamide layer formed by interfacial polymerization at the inner surface of hollow fibers. However, once polymerization occurs, the system is almost a black box where it is difficult to disentangle the relative contribution to performance of (i) water permeation through AqpZ channels and (ii) the possible modification of the properties or structure of the polymer layer by the mere presence of protein and lipid. Indeed, the fate of protein and lipid once the polymer is formed, and how much of it is actually used, is under debate. Also, the performance of these modules has been reported to be stable over several months. This is intriguing because of the expected degradation of functional AqpZ and lipid with time. Herein, we used lipid and AqpZ, both fluorescently labeled, to unequivocally localize both components only at the inner surface of the hollow fibers. To characterize module performance, we tested about 30 half-inch modules containing five hollow fibers each. Those reconstituted with wild type AqpZ produced higher permeability (∼8.5 ± 0.9 LMH/bar) than those reconstituted with AqpZ mutant (R189A) (∼5.6 ± 1.7 LMH/bar) or lipid-only liposomes (3.7 ± 1.1 LMH/bar). However, while these differences are significant, they are smaller than expected from the comparison of relative permeabilities of membranes incorporating wild-type AqpZ, R189A mutant and only-lipid. In addition, we show that in a five-month long experiment, performance of two of these modules showed only minor deterioration, if any, which is not consistent with the observed rapid degradation of proteoliposomes at room temperature. Overall, these data obtained in this set-up suggests that although both AqpZ and lipid are localized at the inner of the hollow fibers, they mainly behave as additives that modify the properties of the robust polyamide layer. A small contribution of AqpZ channel activity to module performance is possible, but to be significant it would require full coverage and a higher protein density in the proteoliposomes, which at present cannot be achieved in the current protocol.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Sharma, Loveena
Ye, Li
Yong, Clare
Seetharaman, Ramya
Kho, Kailing
Surya, Wahyu
Wang, Rong
Torres, Jaume
format Article
author Sharma, Loveena
Ye, Li
Yong, Clare
Seetharaman, Ramya
Kho, Kailing
Surya, Wahyu
Wang, Rong
Torres, Jaume
author_sort Sharma, Loveena
title Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
title_short Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
title_full Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
title_fullStr Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
title_full_unstemmed Aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
title_sort aquaporin-based membranes made by interfacial polymerization in hollow fibers: visualization and role of aquaporin in water permeability
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161530
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