https://www.selleckchem.com/products/crt0066101-dihydrochloride.html We explored the coupling of laccases to magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) with different surface chemical coating. Two laccase variants offering two opposite and precise orientations of the substrate oxidation site were immobilised onto core-shell MNPs presenting either aliphatic aldehyde, aromatic aldehyde or azide functional groups at the particles surface. Oxidation capabilities of the six-resulting laccase-MNP hybrids were compared on ABTS and coniferyl alcohol. Herein, we show that the original interfaces created differ substantially in their reactivities with an amplitude from 1 to > 4 folds depending on the nature of the substrate. Taking enzyme orientation into account in the design of surface modification represents a way to introduce selectivity in laccase catalysed reactions.In alcoholic liver disease (ALD) research, animal models, as one of the most popular methods to explore pathology and therapeutic drug screening, show the limitations of expensive cost and ethic, as well as long modeling time. To minimize the use of animal models in ALD research, an artificial liver model has been developed by incorporating HepG2 cells into hydrogel matrix based on difunctional hyaluronan and collagen. And on this basis an alcohol-induced ALD model in vitro by adding alcohol in the engineering process has been established. Results showed that the construct exhibited a simulated synthetic and metabolic liver function thanks to the bionic fibrillar and viscoelastic characteristics of hydrogels. And the in vitro alcohol-induced ALD model was also proved to be successfully established, even presenting equal results with ALD mice. Furthermore, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) as an intervention on ALD was confirmed in both in vitro and in vivo model. The findings indicate our simple artificial liver model is not only highly predictive but also easy to apply to drug screening and implantation studies, suggestin